نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان.

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01-22-2004, 05:30 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان.




    نداء عاجل


    الى المجتمع الدولى ومنظمات حقوق الانسان:-



    يشن النظام الحاكم فى الخرطوم حرب أبادة لمواطنى دارفور بغرب السودان ويستخدم الطائرات وكل انواع اسلحة الدمار. ونتج عن ذلك سقوط اكثر من الفى قتيل وجريح جلهم من الشيوخ والاطفال والنساء واحرقت القرى واعتقل العديد من ابناء دارفور.

    تناشد المجموعة السودانية لضحايا التعذيب بهولندا المجتمع الدولى ومنظمات حقوق الانسان التدخل العاجل لايقاف الحروب فى السودان والضغط على النظام فى السودان لاحترام المواثيق والمعاهدات الدولية، واطلاق سراح كل المعتقلين .

    عن المجموعة :
    علي العوض

    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:45 AM)









                  

01-22-2004, 05:57 PM

اساسي
<aاساسي
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-20-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 16468

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    الي جميع المجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الانسان

    كما ان هؤلاء المواطنين لا يحملون سلاحا بل اغصان زيتون في اياديهم قامت الحكومة دون سبب وبتربص مسبق من الحكومة بقتالهم دون سبب
    فهم الامنون في قراهم لم يحملوا السلاح ويروعوا الامنين ولم يدمروا القري لم يستهدفوا منشئات الدولة ولم يتلقوا الدعومات المشبوهة ابدا لقتال الحكومة استقلت الحكومة طيبتهم ووداعتهم فقط لا شئ لابادتهم من علي وجه الارض ...!!!
                  

01-22-2004, 06:05 PM

Tumadir
<aTumadir
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-23-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 14699

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: اساسي)

    لا للاباده الجماعيه..
    لا لانتهاك حقوق الانسان..

    لا للتعذيب والنهب والسلب واستباحة الدماء ..

    وقطعا لا والف لا.. لقتل المواطنين من حساب المال العام..بيد الحاكمين..تحت اى تهمة او شعار.

    ولا لتكرار الماساة..والتسويف..بينما تنفذ اهداف المستفيدين من فظائع التصفيات العرقيه..


    اوقــــــــــــــــــــــــع
                  

01-22-2004, 06:10 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Tumadir)

    بت الشيخ..العزيزة تماضر..
    لن يهدأ لهم بال حتي يروا السودان ممزق وما يحدث في دارفور
    يندي له جبين كل حر سليم القلب والعقل..
    اللهم رحماك بنا من هؤلاء الهولاكيين الجدد..

    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-06-2004, 03:33 PM)

                  

01-22-2004, 06:07 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: اساسي)

    أساسي...
    الله يكون في عونك..
                  

01-22-2004, 06:26 PM

اساسي
<aاساسي
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-20-2002
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    تسلم يا خالد وان شاء الله جمعا

    ومن يتوكل على الله فهو حسبه
                  

01-22-2004, 06:39 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: اساسي)

    أساسي..
    هل المطالبة بالحقوق تبرر للحرب؟؟
    هل التذمر علي سؤ الأوضاع يبرر القتل الجماعي؟؟
    هل إغتيال النساء والأطفال وحرق القري يمكن من شرع الله؟؟

    (إنك لا تهدي من أحببت ولكن الله يهدي من يشاء)

    الله يكون في عونك
                  

01-22-2004, 07:17 PM

اساسي
<aاساسي
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-20-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 16468

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    الاخ العزيز خالد

    اذا كان من يطالب بحقه يحمل السلاح ولم يرضي بغير القتال سبيلا ؟؟

    اذا كان التزمر بترويع الامنين وحرق القري واستباحتها ؟؟؟
                  

01-22-2004, 07:25 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: اساسي)

    الفاضل أساسي..
    قولك أخي العزيز خالد أزال من نفسي سؤ الظن
    فخطابك في الرد الأول حمال أوجه.فلك مني العذر وطلب السماح..
    أما الحرب يا أساسي فلا مبرر لها لأنها تحرق الأخضر واليابس
    ولا تلد إلا النار والمذيد من الظلامات..ونحتاج السلام يا أساسي..
    السلام..السلام..لذا نردد لا للحرب .
                  

02-01-2004, 00:06 AM

فايز السليك

تاريخ التسجيل: 01-17-2004
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: اساسي)

    الي جميع المجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الانسان

    كما ان هؤلاء المواطنين لا يحملون سلاحا بل اغصان زيتون في اياديهم قامت الحكومة دون سبب وبتربص مسبق من الحكومة بقتالهم دون سبب
    فهم الامنون في قراهم لم يحملوا السلاح ويروعوا الامنين ولم يدمروا القري لم يستهدفوا منشئات الدولة ولم يتلقوا الدعومات المشبوهة ابدا لقتال الحكومة استقلت الحكومة طيبتهم ووداعتهم فقط لا شئ لابادتهم من علي وجه الاالي جميع المجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الانسان

    كما ان هؤلاء المواطنين لا يحملون سلاحا بل اغصان زيتون في اياديهم قامت الحكومة دون سبب وبتربص مسبق من الحكومة بقتالهم دون سبب
    فهم الامنون في قراهم لم يحملوا السلاح ويروعوا الامنين ولم يدمروا القري لم يستهدفوا منشئات الدولة ولم يتلقوا الدعومات المشبوهة ابدا لقتال الحكومة استقلت الحكومة طيبتهم ووداعتهم فقط لا شئ لابادتهم من علي وجه الارض ...!!! رض ...!!!
    ما هذا؟؟؟.هل هو سودانى؟؟
    اما تصريحات البشير فتذكرنا الثلاثين من يونيو كل عام بان ( هذا العام سيكون عام الحسم لمشكلة الجنوب) وهب ان الجيش قضى على الجميع فهل موت المناضل يعنى موت القضية؟
    فايز السليك
                  

01-22-2004, 07:49 PM

nahar osman nahar
<anahar osman nahar
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-31-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    الشكر لك خالد ومن عبرك إلي علي العوض


    نهار عثمان نهار
                  

01-22-2004, 08:17 PM

Mohamed Adam
<aMohamed Adam
تاريخ التسجيل: 01-21-2004
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    انا لله وانا اليه راجعون.
    الطرفين سودانين و فقدهم نقصان للوطن ولكن الراعي مسؤل من الرعيه
    لماذا هذه الرعيه وجهت جام قضبها علي الراعي ؟ هذا هو مربط الفرس.
                  

01-22-2004, 08:35 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Mohamed Adam)

    العزيز نهار..
    توصل تحاياك وتشكر..

    محمد آدم..
    عداك العيب..
    لك الود
                  

01-22-2004, 09:01 PM

Adil Isaac
<aAdil Isaac
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-02-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    Up

    Adil

    News Article by VOA posted on January 22, 2004 at 10:28:36: EST (-5 GMT)

    Doctors Without Borders Warns Of Humanitarian Catastrophe In Darfur, Sudan

    Josephine Kamara
    VOA - Washington
    20 Jan 2004

    Kamara interview with Dr. Tatay[Download] (MP3)
    Kamara interview with Dr. Tatay[Stream] (MP3)

    Doctors Without Borders says a humanitarian catastrophe is waiting to happen across the border in the Darfur region of western Sudan. This after Sudanese authorities closed camps last week near the city of Nyala in an attempt to forcibly transfer displaced persons to other camps.
    The group has been operating in the region since December last year near the populations displaced by fighting. Dr. Mercedes Tatay is the Deputy Director of Doctors Without Border’s emergency program. She told English to Africa reporter Josephine Kamara that the forcible relocation of displaced people by the government in the region is making it difficult for any humanitarian activity to take place.

    In fact she says Doctors without Borders has moved its operations away from Nyala, because as she puts it, “it is no longer safe” for the group to work there.

    Dr. Tatay says Doctors without Borders and other aid agencies are appealing to the warring parties to allow humanitarian workers to provide assistance to hundreds of thousands displaced people caught up in the fighting.

    Click above links to download or listen to Kamara interview.

    (عدل بواسطة Adil Isaac on 01-22-2004, 09:22 PM)

                  

01-22-2004, 10:05 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Adil Isaac)

    تشكر يا دكتور عادل..

    وللفائدة هذه محاولة لترجمة الخبر :

    تقول منظمة أطباء بلا حدود أن كارثة إنسانية يتوقع حدوثها علي الحدود في منطقة دارفور غرب السودان.هذا بعد إغلاق الحكومة السودانية لمعسكرات النازحين ومحاولة ترحيلهم قسرا إلي أماكن أخري. مجموعة أطباء بلا حدود ظلت تعمل في المنطقة منذ ديسمبر العام الماضي بالقرب من مناطق
    نزوح الهاربين من الحرب، ودكتور (Mercedes Tatay) هي مساعدة المدير لمنظمة أطباء بلا حدود،
    وصرحت لصحيفة (English to Africa) أن إعادة التوطين القسري من قبل الحكومة للنازحيين تعوق العمل الإغاثي ،وأن منظمة أطباء بلا حدود قد قامت بنقل نشاطها من منطقة نيالا لأن الأخيرة ما عادت منطقة آمنة وصالحة للعمل.ووجهت منظمة أطباء بلا حدود والمنظمات الغير حكومية الأخري نداء لطرفي النزاع للسماح لهم بمساعدة الآلاف من النازحين المحاصرين في أماكن القتال.

    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 01-22-2004, 10:06 PM)

                  

01-22-2004, 10:11 PM

hala guta

تاريخ التسجيل: 04-13-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    اضم صوتى يا خالد
    بلا اى تحفظات
    هالة
                  

01-22-2004, 11:02 PM

abdelrahim abayazid
<aabdelrahim abayazid
تاريخ التسجيل: 06-19-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: hala guta)

    http://www.midan.net/nm/private/tahlil_cyasy/november_03.htm


    البشير يؤكد ان الحرب في دارفور ستنتهي خلال ايام
    سودانيز اون لاين
    1/22 5:29pm
    الخرطوم - ا ف ب
    صرح الرئيس السوداني عمر البشير بانه سيتم القضاء على التمرد في دارفور قريبا بينما اعلن والي شمال دارفور عثمان يوسف كبر، مقتل احد قادة المتمردين في منطقة غرب دارفور.
    وقال البشير في تصريحات نشرتها صحيفة الانباء الرسمية اليوم الخميس ان "الحرب ستنتهي في دافور خلال ايام وسيحل السلام وتعود الحياة الي طبيعتها".
    Quote: ونقل المركز السوداني للخدمات الصحافية عن كبر قوله ان القوات الحكومية اقتحمت مساء الثلاثاء "منطقة عين سرو وهزمت المتمردين وقتلت قائدهم يحيي لبس". واضاف ان القوات الحكومية "استطاعت دحر المتمردين"، مؤكدا ان "الموقف الان تحت السيطرة والامن مستتب"


    واكد ان "نهاية الشهر المقبل ستشهد نتائج مباشرة على الصعيد الامني" مشددا في الوقت ذاته على "تمسك الحكومة بالحوار والحل السلمي لقضية دارفور".

    واعلن وزير الخارجية السوداني مصطفى عثمان اسماعيل الثلاثاء ان بلاده ترغب في التوصل الى حل سياسي لمشكلة دارفور مشيرا مع ذلك الى ان الخرطوم تجد نفسها "مضطرة" للجوء الى القوة ضد المتمردين في هذه المنطقة الحدودية مع تشاد.
    Quote: وقال ان "الحكومة ما زالت ملتزمة التوصل الى حل سياسي لمشكلة دارفور لكنها تجد نفسها مضطرة حاليا للجوء الى الوسائل العسكرية" لمواجهة المتمردين.

    وظهرت حركة التمرد في دارفور التي تطالب بالتنمية الاقتصادية في المنطقة، في فبراير من العام الحالي 2003.
    Quote: وقد ادى النزاع الى سقوط المئات من القتلى وفق الارقام الرسمية وثلاثة آلاف قتيل وفق المتمردين فيما اضطر نصف مليون شخص الى النزوح هربا من المعارك توجه الالاف منهم الى تشاد المجاورة.


    اقرا اخر الاخبار السودانية على سودانيز اون لاين http://www.sudaneseonline.com


    الحكومة تتكلم عن الحل السلمي وتدعي انها مضطرة الي استعمال القوة الان.
    الكلام عن نهاية الشهر يعني مزيدا من القتل والتشريد والحسم بالقوة وهذا حل مرفوض واثبت فشله في تجربة عشرين
    عاما ماضية.
                  

01-23-2004, 05:20 PM

Ali Mahgoub

تاريخ التسجيل: 08-10-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    الحرب ستنهى فى خلال ايام كما أكد " الصحاف"، أقصد البشير، وتفيد البلاغات والتقارير العسكرية أن القوات الحكومية تسيطر على الوضع والأمن مستتب !! وقد ادى النزاع الى سقوط المئات من القتلى...... !! .. هكذا تحل مشاكل السودان ... إنتهاء الحرب ليس بالأمانى وليس بالتصريحات الجوفاء التى تلهب نيرانها ولكن بالتعامل الجاد معها وممسبباتها والسعى الجدى فى حلها. هذه السلطة منظومة كلية يصعب تجزئتها، تكوينها العضوي والنفسى والفكرى من دعاة الحرب والعنف والقتل وهم حقيقة أثرياء حرب فمصلحتهم فى استمرارها.
    فالندعم الاتجاه الرامى لمحاربة عقلية الحرب، فالمصالح لا تأتى إلا على أجساد القتلى فقط، بل بالاحقاق والموضوعية.

    معاً نحو وطن اَمن
                  

01-23-2004, 07:09 PM

بلدى يا حبوب
<aبلدى يا حبوب
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-29-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 9833

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    الاخ خالد الحاج

    اهلنا الطبيبن فى درافور يتعرضون الى وابل المدافع والرصاص والى هجمات عصابات الجنجويد المدعومة من النظام وهذه القوات لا غاية لها غير القتل وسفك الدماء والنهب والسلب وما مارسته فى منطقة بحر الغزال الكبرى خلال جرب الجنوب تعيده الان فى اقليم دارفور وبعون من النظام
    فلنقف جمعيا مع هذاالنداء
    تحياتى
                  

01-23-2004, 10:16 PM

تراث
<aتراث
تاريخ التسجيل: 11-03-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 1588

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: بلدى يا حبوب)

    نضم صوتنا العالي الى المجموعة السودانية في هولندا . وننبه ونحذر من ان ما يحدث في دارفور من شأنه ان يتحول الى جرح عميق دامي مستمر النزف اذا استمرت الحكومة في التعامل معه بهذه الوسائل العسكرية وبالكذب وتلك الشعارات العنصريةالبغيضة التي تعاملت بها مع ما يحدث في الجنوب لسنوات طويلة ولم تجن هي ولا وطننا وشعبنا الا المزيد من المأسي .
    متى يعلم حكام السودان ان لمواطني هذا البلد حقوقاً مشروعة ، ظلت تلك الحكومات تحرمهم منا ، ولا ترى في مواجهتها سوى السلاح والجيش التي تمتلكه ؟
                  

01-31-2004, 04:35 PM

abdelrahim abayazid
<aabdelrahim abayazid
تاريخ التسجيل: 06-19-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 4521

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: تراث)

    القوات المسلحة تستعيد مواقع استراتيجية من متمردي دارفور
    سودانيز اون لاين
    1/30 5:55pm
    الخرطوم - رويترز
    قال راديو ام درمان اليوم الجمعة ان الجيش السوداني اعلن استعادته بلدة كان المتمردون يسيطرون عليها في ولاية دارفور بغرب السودان وايضا سبعة معسكرات اخرى للمتمردين في المنطقة.
    ونقل الراديو عن بيان للجيش السوداني صدر امس الخميس قوله ان القوات الحكومية طردت المتمردين من بلدة التينه الممتدة على جانبي الحدود السودانية والتشادية. ولم تكن هناك قوات حكومية سودانية في الجانب السوداني من التينه
    حين زار وفد صحفي دولي البلدة اوائل الاسبوع الحالي.
    وجاء في البيان كانت هدية القوات المسلحة وعناصر مساندة من الشرطة الشعبية وقوات الدفاع الشعبي للشعب السوداني في عيد الاضحى المبارك دخولها لمدينة التينه وطرد العدو منها وتأمينها تماما.
    وشاهد صحفيو رويترز يوم الاثنين الماضي طائرة تابعة للقوات الحكومية السودانية وهي تقصف منزلا في الشطر السوداني من بلدة التينه.
    وقال الجيش السوداني في بيانه ان القوات السودانية //قامت باستعادة وتأمين// سبعة معسكرات للمتمردين في شمال دارفور من بينها معسكرا ابو جمرة وكورني. وذكر الجيش ان معسكر كورني هو اكبر قاعدة للمتمردين.
    ولم يذكر البيان متى استعادت القوات السودانية التينه والقواعد.
    وبدأ المتمردون انتفاضتهم في دارفور بغرب السودان في فبراير شباط ويتهمون الحكومة بتهميش المنطقة القاحلة. وتنفي الحكومة الاتهام.
    وقال عمال اغاثة وسكان محليون ان طائرة حربية سودانية كانت تهاجم متمردين في غرب السودان قصفت الجانب التشادي من الحدود امس الخميس في امتداد نادر لحرب تدور في اقليم دارفور النائي بغرب السودان الى داخل تشاد.
    وقالت سونيا بيراسول منسقة الاغاثة لمنظمة اطباء بلا حدود وهي منظمة طبية خيرية تعمل في شرق تشاد ان رجلا وطفلته وعمرها سنتان قتلا كما اصيب 15 اخرون بينهم اربعة اطفال جراء القصف.
    وقالت بيراسول لرويترز انها طائرة سودانية. سمعنا الانفجارات فيما كانت تلقي القنابل هذا الصباح. مضيفة ان السلطات المحلية افادت ان القتلى والمصابين في مدينة التينه الحدودية هم تشاديون.
    واردفت بيراسول التي تعمل في مستشفى بالمدينة فجأة بدأوا القصف بشكل متتابع وسريع. القصف كان قريبا للغاية.
    ولم يرد تعليق فوري من حكومة السودان او تشاد عن الحادث.
    وتخوض جماعتان متمردتان رئيسيتان حربا ضد الحكومة السودانية في منطقة دارفور منذ فبراير شباط الماضي.
    ومنذ انهيار محادثات السلام بين احدى حركتي التمرد والحكومة السودانية الشهر الماضي ازدادت حدة القتال واضطر الالاف للفرار هربا من المعارك الى دولة تشاد المجاورة.
    واوضحت بيراسول نقلا عن سكان محليين ان قوات من الجيش السوداني دخلت امس الخميس الجانب السوداني من مدينة التينه.
    وحققت حكومة الخرطوم ومتمردون في الجنوب تمثلهم الحركة الشعبية لتحرير السودان تقدما لانهاء حرب اهلية مستمرة منذ 20 عاما خلال محادثات سلام تجري في كينيا.
    اقرا اخر الاخبار السودانية على سودانيز اون لاين http://www.sudaneseonline.com

    طبعا الريئس عمر البشير وعد بانهاء التمرد بنهاية الشهر ولكم ان تحكموا
                  

01-31-2004, 08:09 PM

degna
<adegna
تاريخ التسجيل: 06-04-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 2981

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: abdelrahim abayazid)

    لا للجرائم العنصريه والحاقدة لدارفور

    لا للسياسات الغاشمة ضد سكان وثوار هذه المناطق

    الضمير والانسانية والعقل الذكي والقلب السليم يقولوا لا لهذه الوحشية واللاانسانية


    ali
                  

02-01-2004, 11:59 AM

Al-Masafaa
<aAl-Masafaa
تاريخ التسجيل: 04-25-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 1586

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: degna)

    لا للحرب و الدمار
    نعم للسلام الكامل الشامل.

    مكان السجن مستشفى
    مكان النفى كلية
    مكان الاسرى وردية
    مكان الحسرة اغنية
    مكان الطلقة عصفورة
    تحلق حول نافورة
    و تمازح شفع الروضة
                  

02-02-2004, 00:11 AM

فايز السليك

تاريخ التسجيل: 01-17-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    January 31, 2004

    The genocidal campaign in Darfur is worsening. The Sudanese government forces
    and its allied militias (Janjaweed) continue their massive genocidal campaign
    against the civilian peoples of Darfur. Since the beginning of January 2004,
    daily bombing raids on villages in Darfur western Sudan. Antonov aircraft were
    dropping bombs every day in different areas around Jabel Marra, Teina, Ambro-
    Karnoy, and some other areas in Darfur. The raids are killing hundreds of
    civilians and causing hundred of thousands more to flee their villages and
    being displaced around the cities, mountains, valleys, deserts and across the
    borders into neighboring Chad.

    In January 31, 2004, the government forces and its allied militias (Janjaweed)
    attacked, and burned nine (9) villages west of Jabel Marra. Many civilian
    populations were killed, and other thousands were forced to flee their
    villages. Some of victims took shelter in Zalingay, and other different places
    around Jabel Mara area. We still investigate the number of civilian casualties.
    These massacres were the work of a joint force of the government army and its
    allied militias (Janjaweed). The following are two names of the villages and we
    will provide the other names soon after the investigation:

    1- Kournay
    2- Boltigay

    With respect to the past performance records, we would concur with the view
    that the genocidal tendencies in Darfur is getting worse than before. The
    victims are overwhelmingly civilian populations who are often slaughtered
    without mercy by the government soldiers and their allied militias (Janjaweed).
    Therefore, we appeal to the international community to act immediately to the
    rescue the life of civilian populations of Darfur -Western Sudan before it is
    too late. The United Nations and the international community should do all that
    they can to prevent the repeat of a genocide on the scale of Rwanda and Bosnia
    in this neglected region of Sudan. And advice the Sudanese government to bide
    by its commitments under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and
    Political Rights (ICCPR); and not to respond to the conflict in Darfur by
    violating international human rights and humanitarian law.

    End of document
    وصلتنى المعلومات اعلاه للتوء والى من يسخر من تعاطفنا مع اهلنا فى دارفور ان يطلع عليها ويقف مع نفسه وليعرف من هو (الاساسى) فى التخريب والدمار؟ المدنيون الابرياء ام الحومة الغريبة؟ ام حركة تحرير السودان التى تقاتل ضد التهميش؟.هل البنى آدم فى السودان رخيص الى هذا الحد؟؟؟
    فايز السليك
                  

02-02-2004, 07:39 AM

مريم الطيب
<aمريم الطيب
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-18-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 1356

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: فايز السليك)

    لا لانتهاك انسانية الانسان حيثما كان

    لا للتطهير العرقى

    لا لقتل النساء والاطفال والشيوخ العزل

    اضم صوتى لمجموعة هولندا ...واهيب بالجميع

    سلمت اخى خالد
                  

02-03-2004, 11:48 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: مريم الطيب)

    الأعزاء..
    هالة قوتة..
    أبا يزيد..
    علي محجوب..
    بلدي يا حبوب..
    تراث..
    علي دقنا..
    المسافة..
    فايز السليك..
    مريم الطيب..

    شكرا لدعمكم والتبقي قضية دارفور هم الجميع..
                  

02-04-2004, 04:41 AM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)




    Amnesty International Reports on Darfur:
    "Too Many People Killed for No Reason"

    Eric Reeves
    February 3, 2004

    Amnesty International, perhaps the world's most distinguished human
    rights organization, has today issued a very substantial, immensely
    well-researched, and compelling account of the catastrophe unfolding in
    Darfur, far western Sudan. The report ("Darfur: Too Many People Killed
    for No Reason") could not be more timely. For though there have been
    scattered accounts and assessments by various humanitarian
    organizations, important UN statistical generalizations and reportage,
    and growing news reporting, there has been nothing like Amnesty's
    sustained and comprehensive account of the realities that have been
    developing for the last year. This authoritative compendium of gross
    human rights abuses by the Khartoum regime and its Arab militia allies
    (the "Janjaweed"), the rapidly growing racial and ethnic animus that
    defines Khartoum's prosecution of the war in Darfur, and the exploding
    humanitarian crisis deserves the closest possible attention. Full text
    can be found at: http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR540082004

    We learn a great deal from the Amnesty report, and we hear many, many
    of the voices of those who have been displaced in Darfur, internally
    within the province and into neighboring Chad. And the voices bring
    with them horrific stories of civilian destruction, rape, torture, child
    abductions, pillaging, and the profound disruption of agricultural
    production. But as full as Amnesty's account is, and as the report
    itself frankly acknowledges, it touches only on what is visible from the
    Chad-Sudan border, what can be narrated by witnesses able to reach this
    point of tenuous refuge. The vast majority of human suffering and
    destruction remains hidden because of the inaccessibility of Darfur, an
    inaccessibility that Amnesty several times notes is directly related to
    Khartoum's restrictions on travel and humanitarian access.

    No reader can fail to be struck by two features of the Amnesty report:
    [a] the terrifying consistency of the accounts from those who have been
    displaced, and the sheer scale of the destruction, primarily by
    Khartoum's Arab militia allies, now exceedingly heavily armed and
    consistently reported as supported and commanded, directly and
    indirectly, by Khartoum's regular military and security forces.

    On this latter score of the scale of civilian destruction, we must
    nonetheless also take note of Amnesty's detailed accounts of countless
    aerial bombing attacks on civilian targets. Amnesty reports, on the
    basis of a great deal of evidence assiduously assembled, that Khartoum
    has "bombed indiscriminately civilian towns and villages suspected of
    harbouring or sympathizing with members of the armed opposition,
    unlawfully killing many non-combatants" (page 3).

    For example, Amnesty reports that "most villages around Tina (on the
    Chad/Darfur border) were also bombed. Khasan Abu Gamra was bombed so
    many times that its villagers said: 'The planes bomb anytime and
    everywhere, sometimes four times a day, in the morning, in the evening.
    They bomb so much that we can't go to cultivate our fields. Many people
    and animals were killed because of the bombings.' In Tumdubai, about
    four hours walk away from Tina, bombings also occurred several times a
    day." (page 16)

    The report is replete with many more such accounts.

    But it is the Janjaweed militia attacks (transliterated from the Arabic
    by Amnesty as "Janjawid") that clearly emerge as the source of greatest
    devastation. A great deal of the Amnesty report is (appropriately)
    given over to narratives provided by those displaced by Arab militias,
    narratives which are our only real source of information about what is
    happening inside Darfur. For example, under Section 4.2 ("Denial of
    protection and assistance to the displaced in Darfur") Amnesty reports:

    "Scores of civilians fled to Kabkabiya town between June and August
    2003. Reports alleged that 300 villages had been attacked or burnt to
    the ground in the area. Many displaced were reportedly living in the
    open or in the local school in Kabkabiya, having very little or no
    access to humanitarian aid. For instance, hundreds had fled after an
    attack on Shoba, a Fur village situated 7 km south of Kabkabiya on 25
    July, by armed militia wearing government army uniforms, in which at
    least 51 Shoba villagers, including many elders, were killed." (page
    35)

    The brutality of the attacks is captured in another account:

    "The village of Murli, some five kilometres away from Al-Jeneina [very
    near the Chad/Sudan border], was attacked twice between July and August.
    One villager told AI delegates: 'It was early in the morning, people
    were sleeping. About 400 armed people cordoned the village, with
    military uniforms, the same ones worn by the army, with vehicles and
    guns. A
    plane came later, to see if the operation was successful. At least 82
    people were killed during the first attack. Some were shot and others,
    such as children and elderly, were burnt alive in their houses.'" (page
    13-14)

    The largest consequence of the attacks by Khartoum's regular and
    militia forces may be the disruption of the agricultural economy in
    Darfur, where so much of the population survives on subsistence farming.
    This disruption has very large, potentially devastating spill-over
    effects, not only in Darfur but neighboring Chad:

    "Ground attacks [by Khartoum's regular and militia forces] seemed not
    only to aim at killing the people, but also their livelihoods and their
    very means of subsistence. In a region prone to drought and
    underdevelopment, the destruction of houses and crops bears terrible
    consequences on the coping strategies of the local population. It means
    that shelter and food, essential commodities and also economic and
    social rights are being denied to the population. The displacement
    triggered by direct attacks on civilian villages is also adding pressure
    on the populations in Darfur or in Chad where others take refuge."
    (page 19, section 2.1.3 in the Amnesty report: "Destruction of
    villages, crops, and #####ng of cattle and property")

    Given the ethnic and racial animus in Khartoum's prosecution of the war
    in Darfur, highlighted in one way or another on most pages of the
    Amnesty report, this deliberate destruction of economic livelihood is
    clear evidence of genocide: the United Nations Convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (194 declares that
    genocide also consists in "deliberately inflicting on the group
    conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in
    whole or in part" (clause [c]).

    On the consistency of the accounts recorded, it is important to attend
    to Amnesty's characterizations of what it found:

    "Amnesty International delegates obtained more than a hundred
    testimonies from Sudanese refugees in nine locations along the eastern
    Chadian border, scattered over 300 kilometers. The testimonies were
    coherent, credible and all pointed at a quasi-systematic pattern of
    attacks." (page 9)

    "Amnesty International delegates collected many other testimonies from
    the refugees which were consistent with each other. They indicated a
    clear pattern of repeated violations both by the Janjawid and government
    soldiers. Many testimonies consistently suggested that the Janjawid and
    the soldiers were co-operating." (page 15)

    Amnesty also reports a deeply ominous consistency in the evidence that
    war in Darfur is ever more insistently driven by a racial and ethnic
    animus. The attacks on civilians reported to Amnesty characteristically
    refer to "Arab" attackers, who often speak contemptuously of their
    "African" victims:

    "According to an eyewitness, the militia accompanied by soldiers
    attacked people, saying 'You are opponents to the regime, we must crush
    you. As you are black, you are like slaves. Then the entire Darfur
    region will be in the hands of the Arabs. The government is on our side.
    The government plane is on our side, it gives us ammunitions and food."
    (page 12)

    "A refugee farmer from the village of Kishkish reported to Amnesty
    International delegates the words used by the militia: 'You are Black
    and you are opponents. You are our slaves, the Darfur region is in our
    hands and you are our herders.' They also reportedly said: 'You are
    slaves, we will kill you. You are like dust, we will crush you.' Another
    civilian attacked was reportedly told: 'You are in the fields, the rest
    is for our horses. We have the government on our right side, you are on
    the left side. You have nothing for yourselves.'" (page 2

    "A civilian from Jafal confirmed this when he was reportedly told by
    the Janjawid: 'You are opponents to the regime, we must crush you. As
    you are Black, you are like slaves. Then all the Darfur region will be
    in our hands. The government is on our side. The government plane is
    on our side to give us ammunition and food.'" (page 2

    "A local chief in the Abu Gamra area, between Tina and Kornoy, painted
    the extent of the destruction in his village: 'The Arabs and the
    government forces arrived on both sides of the village, with vehicles,
    on horseback and on camels, and armed with big weapons. The Arabs
    cordoned the village with more than 1,000 horses. There was also a
    helicopter and an Antonov plane. They shelled the town with more than
    200 shells. We counted 119 persons who were killed by the shelling. Then
    the Arabs burnt all our houses, took all the goods from the market. A
    bulldozer destroyed houses. Cars belonging to the merchants were burnt
    and generators were stolen. They said they wanted to conquer the whole
    territory and that the Blacks did not have a right to remain in the
    region.'" (page 20)

    These accounts square all too well with numerous others coming from
    humanitarian organizations, news reports, and other sources.

    Though Amnesty International does not describe this massive destruction
    of civilians, with clear racial and ethnic animus, as "ethnic cleansing"
    or genocide, it is difficult to read the report in full and not be drawn
    inevitably to this conclusion. Amnesty does speak of "ethnic
    differences between communities becoming more and more manipulated in
    the current conflict" (page 4), and offers this overview:

    "Another division often referred to is between those labeled or seeing
    themselves as 'Arabs' and those who are 'Black' or 'indigenous African.'
    The 'Arabs' are composed mainly of nomad groups, who would claim 'Arab'
    descent and speak Arabic and the 'Blacks' or 'Africans,' those who are
    not of Arab descent and speak their own local language. However,
    Amnesty International was told several times that the Beni Hussein, seen
    as 'Arabs,' are not taking part in the current conflict. The
    organization also met in Chad members of the Dorok community who said
    they were attacked by the Arab militia after they refused to join them
    and refer to themselves as 'Black Arabs.' In short, differences between
    groups are becoming more manipulated and entrenched as the conflict
    worsens." (page 4)

    What Amnesty does not say directly enough, though providing all the
    evidence required for the conclusion, is that this "manipulation" and
    "entrenchment" along racial and ethnic lines is being deliberately
    engineered by the Khartoum regime as a key feature in its use of Arab
    militias as the main counter-insurgency weapon in Darfur. It is no less
    genocide because it takes place primarily by military proxy: the
    strategy is still clearly one of destroying, in whole or in part, the
    African tribal groups that are perceived as supporting the Sudan
    Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), both
    discussed in the Amnesty report.

    The last section in the body of the Amnesty International report
    (Section 5) notes how Khartoum's prosecution of the war in Darfur
    entails many extremely serious violations of international human rights
    law and international humanitarian law, including violations of various
    of the Geneva Conventions. Dutifully, Amnesty also notes that "Sudan
    has ratified numerous international and regional human rights treaties,"
    including "the Geneva Conventions of 1949 to which Sudan is a state
    party" (page 37).

    The nature of Khartoum's war against the people of the south---now over
    20 years and the longest and most destructive conflict of its kind in
    the world---should make fully clear the regime's utter contempt for all
    "international human rights law" and "international humanitarian law,"
    as well as the Geneva Conventions, the Rome Convention of the
    International Criminal Court, and various other treaties it has on
    previous occasions proved expedient for Khartoum to sign. But it must
    still be said that such continued and open flouting of international
    law, if receiving no appropriate rebuke from the international
    community, inevitably undermines this tenuous constraint upon the
    actions of those who would do evil in the world, and weakens our ability
    to shame or hold accountable great powers for their failure to respect
    international law.

    It is in this context that we should assess the thirteen
    "recommendations to the Sudanese government" articulated by Amnesty
    International (pages 40-41). These include (among others) that the
    regime:

    *"publicly condemn all instances of grave abuses of human rights and
    international humanitarian law committed by its armed forces and militia
    aligned to them; and set up independent and impartial investigations
    into all such reported cases;

    *"take immediate measures to give adequate protection to civilians in
    Darfur against deliberate and indiscriminate attacks;

    *"ensure that humanitarian organizations have unrestricted and secure
    access to the whole Darfur region and to all victims of the conflict,
    including internally displaced persons;

    *"ease all support and supplies to any irregular armed forces,
    including Arab militia and the Janjawid, or establish clear chain of
    command control over them, giving clear instructions that abuses of
    human rights and humanitarian law will not be tolerated and making them
    accountable to these instructions;

    *"allow the establishment of a human rights monitoring component in any
    ceasefire monitoring force in the region which can investigate freely
    attacks on civilians" (page 40)

    It is, of course, appropriate for a supremely distinguished human
    rights organization to make such recommendations, as well as a series of
    other recommendations to all who are party to the conflict in Darfur or
    who may play a role in resolving the conflict and responding to the
    massive humanitarian crisis it has spawned. But Khartoum has responded
    to none of these recommendations when they have come from other sources,
    including the US State Department, and gives absolutely no sign of
    presently complying in any fashion with any of the recommendations.

    In turn, Amnesty International well understands that its voice cannot
    compel, only clarify both human rights abuses and what the appropriate
    responses to those abuses would be, at least in a world defined by moral
    responsiveness.

    Of course the world is only very partially defined by moral
    responsiveness; and nowhere is it less defined in these terms than in
    Khartoum. Amnesty International has made clear, at least as far as
    present evidence permits, the ghastly and deeply ominous realities in
    Darfur, the gross and continuous abuses of human rights that define
    Khartoum's prosecution of the war, and the terrifying scale of the
    humanitarian crisis now exploding into catastrophe. But the task of
    holding the Khartoum regime accountable, and of responding with
    appropriate urgency to vast and desperate human need, is that of the
    international community as a whole.

    It continues to be the case, as it has for too many months, that for
    reasons of diplomatic expediency and moral indecision, no such
    appropriate response is in evidence. In one sense, the scale of the
    human consequences of this failure cannot yet be measured; in another
    sense, the consequences are all too readily evident and all too
    disgracing of the very notion of an "international community."

    Eric Reeves
    Smith College
    Northampton, MA 01063

    413-585-3326
    [email protected]



    شكري وتقديري للأخ /a.abdalla

    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:48 AM)
    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:56 AM)
    (عدل بواسطة خالد الحاج on 02-04-2004, 04:57 AM)

                  

02-04-2004, 01:37 PM

مهيرة
<aمهيرة
تاريخ التسجيل: 04-28-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 946

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    لا لقتل النفس التى حرم الله الا بالحق
    لا للظلم
    لا للعدوان
    نعم لحق المواطن ايا كان لونه وعرقه ودينه فى الامن والسلام والعيش الكريم
    اللهم انا لا نسألك رد القضاء ولكن نسألك اللطف فيه
    اللهم الطف بالسودانيين وارحمهم يا ارحم الراحمين
    اللهم لا تسلط علينا بذنوبنا من لا يخافك فينا ولا يرحمنا
    آميييييييييييين
                  

02-04-2004, 02:01 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: مهيرة)

    اللهم آمين..
    وأرجو أن يستجيب الله لدعائك يا دكتورة..
    كل سنة وإنتي طيبة..
    وتشكري للدعم.
                  

02-04-2004, 03:47 PM

Khalid Eltayeb
<aKhalid Eltayeb
تاريخ التسجيل: 12-18-2003
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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    لا لانتهاك حق الانسان في الحياة
    لا للتصفية العرقية
    اوقفوا حرب الابادة ضد ابناء و بنات السودان في دارفور .
                  

02-05-2004, 11:11 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Khalid Eltayeb)




    ETHNIC CLEANSING IN DARFUR

    Events in Darfur continue to be a source of great concern. It is in this region in particular that the Government of Sudan (GoS) has embarked on policies that are causing many observers to doubt the nature of its commitment to the peace and well being of Sudan

    In mid December 2003 peace talks in Chad between the GoS and one of the armed rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) broke down. Since then heavy fighting has been reported in all three Darfur states, with nine villages being destroyed in December 2003 alone. Both sides stand accused of violating the ceasefire negotiated in September 2003, and once again civilians are bearing the brunt of the suffering.

    The GoS is keen to stem the flow of information on events in Darfur, hence it constantly harasses journalists and others who visit or report on the region. Nevertheless, the information that is seeping out of Darfur indicates that the government is conducting a campaign of ethnic cleansing involving the systematic abuse of the human rights of the Fur, Zaghawa, Massalit and other African peoples of Darfur comparable to its actions during the height of its brutality in southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. Government tactics include the bombing of civilian targets, the razing of villages by government troops and allied Arab militias known locally as the Janjaweed (man with a horse and a gun), the massacre of civilians, and the rape and abduction of women and children and what many analysts are now terming the ‘systematic’ denial of humanitarian aid. In addition the government is arbitrarily detaining civilians suspected of being sympathetic to the rebel armed factions (the SLA or the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM)), and subjecting the people of Darfur to arbitrary justice.

    In Darfur, the GoS is again making use of racism against the African peoples who form a majority in the region, and is manipulating ethnicity in the same manner as it previously manipulated religion in southern Sudan. The government onslaught on Darfur’s African Muslim civilians has been so ferocious that one African tribal leader is quoted as stating: ‘I believe this is the elimination of the Black race’ . The testimony of several survivors seems to indicate that this may indeed be the aim of the attackers. For example, Tamur Bura Idriss, a 31 year old who survived an attack by militias on refugees camped just inside the Chad border quoted the gunmen as saying: ‘you blacks, we are going to exterminate you.’

    The government initially attempted to deny involvement in events in the region and sought to dismiss the conflict as being one of competition between sedentary and pastoral tribal peoples for the scarce resources in this extremely under developed region. The conflict may well have had its roots in the traditional low-level competition for resources. However, the government’s intervention on the side of pastoralist Arab tribes, through the clearing of land for Arab tribes of Chadian origin and the provision of troops and armaments, escalated the violence and eventually led to the two armed uprisings. In a December statement MPs from Darfur emphasised the political dimension of the conflict and accused the NIF government of manipulating traditional ethnic tensions and pursuing a policy of Arabisation in order to maintain a base of support in the region.

    In any event, few were convinced by the GoS’s earlier protestations of innocence in connection with events in Darfur. A 2003 investigation by Amnesty International concluded that there was ‘compelling evidence that the Khartoum government is largely responsible for the human rights and humanitarian crisis in Darfur’. Moreover, in an echo of events in southern Sudan, the Brussels based human rights NGO the International Crisis Group noted in December 2003 that the government of Sudan had ‘mobilized and armed Arab militias (Janjaweed), whose salary comes directly from booty captured in raids on villages, to terrorise the populace of Darfur’.

    The continuing and systematic human rights abuses perpetrated in Darfur by the government and its allied militias have even forced the normally reticent United Nations (UN) to become more vocal on events in the region. In December 2003 UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed alarm at reports of "killings, rape and the burning and #####ng of entire villages," perpetrated against civilians in Darfur, and the obstruction of humanitarian efforts there. Jan Egland, the UN Under Secretary for Humanitarian Affairs, described the humanitarian crisis in Darfur as ‘possibly the worst in the world today’, while Mukesh Kapila, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan told the BBC that the Sudanese Government was preventing food and medical supplies from reaching Darfur either for security reasons or in order to mask alleged human rights abuses: ‘one must say there is a prima facie case that some of the denials of access may well be related to the discomfort of the parties concerned to allow international witnesses’. Mr Kapila also warned that Darfur could become the arena for the worst humanitarian crisis in Sudan since tens of thousands lost their lives in the 1998 government-induced famine in Bahr-al-Ghazal.

    (From CSW Briefing, January 2004)

    Genocide?
    Article II of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide describes this crime as:

    ‘Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group: killing members of the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; or forcibly transferring children of the group to another group’.



    The term is increasingly arising in connection to events in Darfur:

    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Committee on Conscience
    Atrocities committed against the African peoples of southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains led the Committee to issue a genocide warning for Sudan in 2000 based specifically on the following government actions: ‘a divide-to destroy strategy of pitting ethnic groups against each other, with enormous loss of civilian life; the use of mass starvation as a weapon of destruction; toleration of the enslavement of women and children by government-allied militias; the incessant bombing of hospitals, clinics, schools and other civilian and humanitarian targets; disruption and destabilisation of the communities of those who flee the war zones to other parts of Sudan; and widespread persecution on account of race, ethnicity and religion’.

    In January 2004 the Committee expressed similar concerns regarding events in Darfur:

    ‘In addition to pitting ethnic groups against each other, the government is using other tactics the use of which in southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains led the Committee on Conscience to issue a genocide warning for Sudan, including restrictions on humanitarian access, which threatens mass starvation, and aerial bombardment of civilian targets.’

    Barbara Harff, US Centre for International Development and Conflict Management: Barbara Harff recently stated that Sudan is one of five countries most at risk of genocide. The country meets all six risk factors outlined in the theoretical model for risk assessment and early warning of genocidal violence, namely, prior genocides or politicides (victims killed for their political affiliations or for opposition to a ruling regime); upheaval since 1988; existence of a minority elite; exclusionary ideology; the type of regime; and trade openness. (Preventing Genocide Conference, Stockholm, 27 January 2004)

    Both the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA) report that diplomats speak increasingly of ‘ethnic cleansing’ when discussing events in Darfur. For their part, UN officials are frequently making use of the term ‘systematic’ in connection with the activities of both the government and its allied militias:

    Tom Vraalsen, UN Special Envoy for Humanitarian Affairs in Sudan:
    ‘Delivery of humanitarian assistance to populations in need is hampered mostly by systematically denied access. While [Khartoum's] authorities claim unimpeded access, they greatly restrict access to the areas under their control, while imposing blanket denial to all rebel-held areas.’ (Note to the Emergency Relief Coordinator; ‘Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis in Darfur,’ 8 December 2003)

    ‘Tribal leaders and humanitarian actors on the ground … reported that [Khartoum-backed Arab] militias were launching systematic raids against civilian populations. These attacks included burning and #####ng of villages, large-scale killings, abductions, and other severe violations of human rights. Humanitarian workers have also been targeted, with staff being abducted and relief trucks looted.’ (Note to the Emergency Relief Coordinator; ‘Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis in Darfur,’ 8 December 2003)

    Bertrand Ramcharan, Acting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights:
    ‘The acting High Commissioner for Human Rights is deeply concerned over the deteriorating human rights and humanitarian situation in Darfur, western Sudan. Systematic human rights abuses against unarmed civilians have been reported, including against women and children, as well as burning and #####ng of villages, causing massive internal displacement and an outflow of refugees’ (Geneva, 29 January 2004)

    February 2004
    [email protected]
                  

02-05-2004, 11:13 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)




    SUDAN
    January 2004



    Contents
    Summary 1
    Agreement on Wealth Sharing 2
    Key Outstanding Issues 3
    Southern Reactions 3
    Human Rights Abuses in Northern Sudan 4
    Ethnic Cleansing and Arbitrary Detention in Darfur 7
    Conclusion and Recommendations 10


    SUMMARY
    Peace talks in Naivasha, Kenya under the auspices of the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) have made slow but steady progress, due largely to sustained Western, and particularly American pressure. The latest breakthrough was an agreement on wealth sharing for the six-month pre-interim period and six-year interim period prior to the holding of a southern referendum on self-determination.

    However, the most intractable issues remain to be discussed. Of these, two stand out as having the potential to seriously undermine, if not destroy, prospects for a final North-South peace treaty. The first concerns future arrangements for the three marginalized areas, namely, the Nuba Mountains, Southern Blue Nile (also known as the Funj Region), and Abyei. The second involves the separation of church and state, and the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army request that as the capital of a unitary state, Khartoum should be exempt from Shari’ah Law during the interim period. Unfortunately, recent pronouncements by Sudanese President El Bashir that the IGAD talks have no authority to settle the issue of the disputed territories and that the Government of Sudan (GoS) would not relinquish Shari’ah law have begun to raise doubts regarding the conclusion of a final peace treaty

    Moreover, while there has been steady progress at the peace talks in Naivasha, events elsewhere in Sudan illustrate that the GoS continues to espouse repressive policies. This has occasioned concern in certain quarters regarding the true ambitions of the GoS, fuelling speculation that peace negotiations in Kenya may be a temporary necessity on the part of the government to prevent having to fight a war on several fronts.

    In the north, opposition politicians, students, human rights defenders, journalists and trade unions continue to face harassment, arbitrary detention and torture. Restrictions on freedom of the press continue despite an October 2003 assurance by the president that this was at an end. Harsh and discriminatory sentences continue to be passed, such as the sentence of 100 lashes handed down to a 16 year old Dinka Christian school girl for giving birth out of wedlock.

    In Darfur, where the GoS faces two armed uprisings, it is conducting a campaign of ethnic cleansing involving the systematic abuse of the human rights of the African peoples of Darfur comparable to its actions during the height of its brutality in southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. Government tactics include the bombing of civilian targets, the razing of villages by government troops and allied Arab militias, the massacre of civilians, the rape and abduction of women and children and, what many analysts are now terming, the ‘systematic’ denial of humanitarian aid.


    AGREEMENT ON WEALTH SHARING
    In what the Sudan Peoples Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) leader John Garang described as a ‘paradigm shift’, the key Sudanese warring parties signed an agreement on wealth sharing on 7 January 2004 covering the division of oil and non oil revenues, the management of the oil sector, monetary regulations and the reconstruction of war affected areas.

    The agreement will allow southern Sudan a significant degree of economic independence during the six-month pre-interim period and the subsequent six-year interim period prior to a referendum on self-determination. Under its terms the SPLM/A allows the GoS to retain half of the region’s oil and non-oil revenues during these interim periods, whilst each oil-producing state will receive two percent of net oil wealth ‘in proportion to output produced in such states/regions’ . The agreement allows for the creation of an independent National Petroleum Commission with representatives from north and south to manage the oil sector.

    Importantly, while the SPLM/A agrees to respect existing oil contracts, the agreement provides an avenue of legal remedy for ‘persons whose rights have been violated by oil companies by stating that they are ‘entitled to compensation.’ Under its terms the GoS is also obligated to ‘implement necessary remedial measures’ in cases where the execution of contracts have caused ‘fundamental social and environmental problems. These provisions ought to be of concern to such oil companies as Austria’s OMV, and Malaysia’s Petronas whose activities along with others, were shown in a recent and authoritative study by Human Rights Watch to have amplified government-led abuses of local populations in areas where they hold oil concessions. The agreement also gives communities living in and around oil concessions ‘the right to participate through the respective states/regions in the negotiation of contracts for the development of these resources’ .

    The agreement establishes two separate bodies, the Southern Sudan Land Commission and the National Land Commission charged with arbitrating land disputes ‘between willing contending parties’ and deciding on matters of compensation. The parties also agreed to the introduction of a new national currency and to the creation of a dual banking system during the interim period, with an Islamic banking system operating in northern Sudan and a conventional system operating in the south.


    KEY OUTSTANDING ISSUES
    The first outstanding issue involves power sharing and the interaction between the three levels of government that will exist during the interim period. The first level is the central or national government where all the political parties of Sudan are to be represented. Particularly problematic are the issues of a rotating presidency and the position of vice president, with northerners still baulking at the prospect of an African president at some future date. The percentage and nature of ministerial posts that will be turned over to the SPLA are also a source of disagreement. The SPLA is keen to avoid being allocated powerless and insignificant ministerial positions, as has occurred in the past, and is deeply concerned by the NIF’s numerous parallel systems that govern security and other areas of government which may eventually prevent any SPLA ministerial quota from exercising true power.

    The next tier of government involves the authority that is to govern southern Sudan, and the final tier is the future government of the country’s states and regions. As stated earlier, the matter of how these various tiers will relate to each other remains to be resolved.

    Despite the complexities involved, the Sudanese Foreign Minister Mustafa Othman Ismail expressed that his government hopes to sign a peace deal with the SPKA before the end of January, or within weeks at the latest. "We hope a power-sharing agreement will be signed before the end of the month, God willing." However, this did not occur.

    Another problematic issue involves future arrangements for the three marginalized areas, namely, the Nuba Mountains, Southern Blue Nile (also known as the Funj Region) and the oil rich district of Abyei. Historically these areas were administered as part of northern Sudan. However, they share the ethnicity and aspirations of southern Sudan. Successive northern governments have consistently underdeveloped these areas, and their peoples have fought alongside the southerners. The eventual fate of oil-rich Abyei in particular appears to be causing a deadlock in the negotiations.

    Finally there is the separation of state and religion. The SPLM/A initially asked for the south to be exempt from Shari’ah law, along with Khartoum, given the fact that the latter will function as the capital of a unified and not exclusively Islamic state. The government is adamant that Shari’ah will prevail throughout northern Sudan.


    SOUTHERN REACTIONS
    Southerners appear happy that a longed-for peace may at last be at hand, but continue to be wary regarding the government’s ultimate commitment to the process. In the words of Natalino Losuba Mana the southern Sudanese who runs Norwegian Peoples Aid in Yei County, ‘no one is celebrating yet. We’ll wait to see these promises of peace fulfilled rather than living in hope. We still fear we will make a very good agreement that will never get beyond paper’.

    At a meeting in Nairobi on 6 December 2004 Southern Sudan's fledgling civil society organisations demanded the immediate establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) once a final peace agreement between the government and the SPLA is signed. Although both warring parties are not overly keen on this idea, egregious human rights abuses such as those perpetrated in the past in southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains cannot simply be ignored, and indigenous civil society groups are convinced that a TRC could facilitate ‘harmony, co-existence and forgiveness among the people of Sudan.’ ‘Justice through accountability for past abuses is … critical to a lasting peace and laying the foundation for respect for the rule of law’ in the post civil war era.’


    HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES IN NORTHERN SUDAN
    While encouraging breakthroughs have indeed occurred at the peace talks in Kenya, events elsewhere in Sudan continue to be a cause for serious concern.

    Firstly, the government continues to restrict freedom of expression and to violate the rights of its citizens in northern Sudan.

    In August 2003 President El Bashir announced that state censorship of newspapers should be removed. In practice this has not occurred.

    On 2 September 2003 the daily Al Alwan was suspended until 24 September. A further ban was imposed two days later, which was eventually lifted on 16 October.

    On 13 September 2003 The Khartoum Monitor, an English Language daily was suspended in defiance of an appeal court ruling that quashed an earlier cancellation of the paper’s licence. The paper was allowed to reappear on 16 October 2003. However, on 24 November the paper was suspended for the seventh time in two years, allegedly for promoting slavery, working against the peace process and working against the government.

    On 30 September 2003 the authorities suspended the Al Azimah newspaper. The ban was eventually lifted on 16 October

    On 16 November 2003 the Sudanese authorities accused the independent paper Al Ayam of publishing articles that threatened national security and suspended the paper for six days. This was followed by a further ban in December, when, according to the paper’s editor, security operatives entered the paper’s printing house and, using a favoured tactic, stopped the presses two thirds of the way through their run, thereby causing great financial loss.

    In December the Sudanese National Security Forces allegedly visited the offices of the independent television channel Al Jazeera and informed them of the government’s
                  

02-05-2004, 11:15 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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    displeasure at some of its programmes. Then on 17 December security operatives raided the agency’s Khartoum offices, confiscated equipment and arrested journalist Salih Adam Belo and camera man Hamid Tirab for three hours. The following day the authorities closed the Al Jazeera offices and Salih Adam Belo was rearrested and held incommunicado by the forces of the National Security Authority (NSA). Under the National Security Forces Act this particular organ of the Sudanese security system is allowed to detain people without charge or trial for up to nine months. In its official explanation for the arrest of Mr Belo, the organisation stated that Al Jazeera was transmitting programmes that were ‘stuffed with false information and poor, biased analyses and with pictures and scenes selected to serve its ends’. It cited as evidence reports about tuberculosis, landmine victims in Sudan and events in the western Darfur region.

    Mr Belo was eventually released from Kober Prison on 24 December. However the journalist continues to under go interrogation, and on 1 January 2004 the Sudanese security authorities were reported to have asked the Khartoum government to withdraw Al Jazeera’s licence to run an office in the country.

    Other journalists have also faced difficulties. On 12 November the Editor of the Khartoum Monitor Nhial Bol fled northern Sudan following a sustained campaign of harassment, which included regular death threats from the NSA and an alleged assassination attempt in July 2003. Then on 15 November security forces in Nyala, Darfur detained journalists Gasim Taha of Al Sahafa newspaper and Mouhanad Hussain of Akhbar Alyum for a day. The two journalists had been preparing a report on the torching of two villages in southern Darfur province by Arab militias.

    The continuing restrictions on press freedom have led to protests both locally and internationally. Most significantly on 13 December 2003 the German news agency DPA reported that Sudanese journalists organised a sit in protest at the offices of Al Ayam and the Khartoum Monitor protesting the banning of the two newspapers. 35 Sudanese journalists representing 17 newspapers also signed a statement which declared that they hoped their action would serve to ‘guarantee rights of expression and to enhance freedoms’, and called for a lifting of the bans and for fair trials for the two papers.

    The US Embassy in Sudan also called for a lifting of the two bans, stating that the two papers had been charged on dubious grounds and had not been convicted of wrongdoing. The embassy pointed out that the bans called into question the Sudanese government’s commitment to press freedom, and added ominously for Sudan, that an improvement in Sudan’s human rights performance would be the deciding factor in any US decision to normalise relations with the country.

    The harassment of trade unionists and human rights defenders has also continued. On 21 December 2003 the NSA arrested nine members of the General Trade Union Council at a peaceful meeting in a house in Shambat, Khartoum North. The men were interrogated about the activities of their organisation. They were released seven and a half hours later and ordered to report to the agencies offices the following morning at 11. The following day the men were not questioned, but held until 6 pm and again ordered to report back on the following day.

    On 28 December the NSA arrested Dr Madawi Ibrahim Adam, human rights activist, consultant engineer at Lamba Engineering Company and chairperson of the Sudan Development Organisation (SUDO), a registered non-governmental organisation (NGO). Dr Adam was seized at his home in Omdurman, Security force operatives are said to have searched the house, seized documents and damaged the building. One of the documents seized was a tender for a project to develop water stations in southern Sudan.

    According to the Sudan Organisation Against Torture (SOAT) subsequent to his arrest Dr Adam was taken to his office at Lamba Engineering in Khartoum. The offices were searched and his computer and other items were confiscated. He was detained without charge at an unknown location, and on 3 January 2004 SOAT received information that confirmed that Dr Adam had been transferred to Kober prison. The authorities have yet to give a reason for Dr Adams’ detention. However it is known that he had recently travelled to Darfur, and this may have drawn the government’s attention.

    Students continue to receive harsh treatment, including torture, at the hands of security operatives. On 5 January SOAT received news of the arrest of Waiel Taha, a Khartoum University student activist and SOAT member. Another student, Yousif Fat’h Al Rahman was also arrested. According to SOAT, the two men were separated and Mr Al Rahman was taken to an NSA building where five security officers subjected him to torture. He was subjected to death threats, punched in the face, beaten on the soles of the feet and the back, kicked, pressed in the stomach, forced to drink three litres of water from a bottle inserted in his throat, and strangled. He was also hurled onto a road while handcuffed and is currently receiving treatment for his injuries.

    The NSA initially denied holding Mr Taha, but eventually released him on bail in the early hours of 7 January 2004, charging him under articles 144 (Intimidation) and 182 (Criminal Mischief) of the 1991 Penal Code. He too had been tortured. On the first day of his detention he was blindfolded, tied to a chair, hit in the genitals, beaten with a hose for two hours and threatened with rape.

    In northern Sudan Shari’ah law is currently applicable to all, regardless of their religious affiliation. In a recent case highlighted by both SOAT and Amnesty International, a court in the Kalaka suburb of Khartoum sentenced Intisar Bakri Abdulgader, a teenage student, to 100 lashes for adultery after giving birth to a child out of wedlock. Article 145 of the Penal code defines intercourse outside of marriage as adultery. Ms Abdulgader’s family is of southern Sudanese descent, and although her father is Muslim she was brought up to follow Christianity, her mother’s religion. In an interview with the news agency Agence France Presse, Ms Abdulgader said that her mother had tried in vain to persuade the alleged father to marry her and sign a statement admitting responsibility for the child. Instead the man in question denied ever having met her, and in accordance with Sudanese Islamic law, this denial was sufficient to exonerate him. The sentence, if carried out, would be violation of Sudan’s undertakings under several international conventions to which it is party, including the Convention Against Torture (CAT- that Sudan has signed but has yet to ratify), and such binding legislation as the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

    On 29 December the Christian News Agency Compass Direct reported that the authorities had demolished more than 10 Christian churches and a church-run vocational training centre in the Wad el Bashier camp in West Omdurman during the preceding two months. Demolition crews are reported to have razed centres affiliated to the Anglican Church, the African Inland Church, the Roman Catholic Church and the Sudan Church of Christ, as well as several mosques, health centres, shops, latrines and bakeries. The events occurred during the cold winter months immediately preceding the Christmas season and affected 15,300 households that were subsequently moved to what one source termed ‘a deserted piece of land which lacked supplies of water’. A UN report estimates that almost 7,500 shelters, houses and latrines will eventually be affected under this demolition order.


    ETHNIC CLEANSING AND ARBITRARY DETENTION IN DARFUR
    Events in Darfur continue to be a source of great concern. It is in this region in particular that the GoS has embarked on policies that are causing many to doubt the nature of its commitment to the peace and well being of Sudan

    In mid December 2003 peace talks in Chad between the GoS and one of the armed rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) broke down. The Chadian senior mediator appeared to blame the SLA for making demands that were ‘unacceptable’ and that the GoS termed ‘unrealistic’. However, the SLA had long questioned the impartiality of the Chadian government, and its main demand was that a neutral country under the auspices of Nigeria, the European Union (EU) and the Arab League should observe the peace talks. The second, according to the SLA, was its desire to include other armed factions, including the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) in negotiations. However according to the GoS, the SLA had demanded to be recognised as the sole representative of the Darfur rebellion and had asked the that the GoS hand-over a military garrison of western Sudan.

    Fighting has intensified since the breakdown of the talks. Heavy fighting has been reported in all three Darfur states, and nine villages are reported to have been destroyed in December 2003 alone. Both sides stand accused of violating the ceasefire negotiated in September 2003, and once again civilians have borne the brunt of the suffering.

    The GoS is keen to stem the flow of information on events in Darfur, hence the constant harassment of journalists and others who visit or report on the region. Nevertheless, the information that is seeping out of Darfur indicates that the government is conducting a campaign of ethnic cleansing involving the systematic abuse of the human rights of the Fur, Zaghawa, Massalit and other African peoples of Darfur. It has been compared to its actions during the height of its brutality in southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. Government tactics include the bombing of civilian targets, the razing of villages by government troops and allied Arab militias known locally as the Janjaweed (man with a horse and a gun), the massacre of civilians, and the rape and abduction of women and children and what many analysts are now terming the ‘systematic’ denial of humanitarian aid. In addition the government is arbitrarily detaining civilians suspected of being sympathetic to the SLA or the JEM, and subjecting the people of Darfur to arbitrary justice.

    In Darfur, the GoS is again making use of racism against the African peoples who form a majority in the region, and is manipulating ethnicity in the same manner as it previously manipulated religion in southern Sudan. The government onslaught on African Muslim civilians has been so ferocious that one African tribal leader from Darfur is quoted as stating: ‘I believe this is the elimination of the Black race’ . The testimony of survivors seems to indicate that this may indeed be the aim of the attackers. For example, Tamur Bura Idriss, a 31 year old who survived an attack by militias on refugees who were camped just inside the Chad border heard the gunmen say ‘you blacks, we are going to exterminate you.’

    The government initially attempted to deny involvement in events in the region and sought to dismiss the conflict as being one of competition between sedentary and pastoral tribal peoples for the scarce resources in this extremely under developed region. The conflict may well have had its roots in the traditional low-level competition for resources. However, the government’s intervention on the side of pastoralist Arab tribes, through the clearing of land for Arab tribes of Chadian origin and the provision of troops and armaments, escalated the violence and eventually led to two armed uprisings. In a December statement MPs from Darfur emphasised the political nature of the conflict and accused the NIF government of manipulating traditional ethnic tensions and pursuing a policy of Arabisation in order to maintain a base of support in the region.

    Following the breakdown of the peace talks, President el Bashir recently told a crowd that the government’s ‘priority from now on is to eliminate the rebellion’. Moreover, in a statement that highlighted the link between the government and the Janjaweed he added: ‘we will use the army, the police, the mujahedeen, the horsemen to get rid of the rebellion’. His willingness to openly speak of utilising the Janjaweed, who primarily attack villages containing non-combatants, is ominous. The GoS also stated that it would begin to prosecute leaders of the Darfur uprising under terrorism laws and seek their extradition from abroad.

    Few, in any event, had been convinced by the government’s earlier protestations of innocence in connection with events in Darfur. An investigation by Amnesty International into events in the region had concluded that there was ‘compelling evidence that the Khartoum government is largely responsible for the human rights and humanitarian crisis in Darfur’. Moreover, in an echo of events in southern Sudan, the Brussels based human rights NGO the International Crisis Group noted in December that the government of Sudan has mobilized and armed Arab militias (Janjaweed), whose salary comes directly from booty captured in raids on villages, to terrorise the populace of Darfur’.

    As was the case in southern Sudan, the raids in Darfur are systematic and brutal. In an event that further underlines the fact that the GoS is using tactics honed in the killing fields of Bahr al Ghazal and the Nuba Mountains to devastating effect, Amnesty International recently received reports of the abduction of 13 people - three women and many children under 18 and some as young as nine - from Ma’un village, in south Kornoy, West Darfur State. Even more recently, refugees interviewed by a UNHCR emergency team visiting a makeshift refugee site in Djoran in Chad consistently and independently described attacks on their villages by marauding Arab militia groups during which women and girls are raped and kidnapped and goods and livestock are looted. One man from the village of Gurama in Darfur told of an attack on his village by 150 men on camel and horseback. He fled into the surrounding hills with his pregnant wife and children, and his wife gave birth the following day. However the Janjaweed proceeded to set the surrounding bush on fire forcing the family to escape to another hill. The man, who fled on a donkey, said he had left his wife and children in hiding in Sudan while he checked on conditions in Djoran. Another refugee told the UNHCR team that she had managed to escape Gurama along with her five children, but that the Janjaweed had murdered her father in his hut.

    The UN estimates that at least 3000 people have died since February 2003. USAID puts the figure at 7000 . According to the UN envoy for humanitarian affairs in Sudan, a million people are currently affected by the civil war currently raging in Darfur . UNICEF estimates that over 750, 000 people have been displaced since February 2003. The UN also estimates that 95,000 Darfur civilians have fled to neighbouring Chad. 30,000 are reported to have poured over the border during December alone and in one incident over the weekend of 2-5 January 2004 up to 3000 families are reported to have fled their razed and looted villages for the town of Junaynah.

    The continuing and systematic abuses perpetrated in Darfur by the government and its allied militias have even forced the UN to become more vocal on events in the region. In December United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed alarm at reports of "killings, rape and the burning and #####ng of entire villages," perpetrated against civilians in Darfur, and the obstructing of humanitarian efforts there. Jan Egland, the UN Under Secretary for Humanitarian Affairs, described the humanitarian crisis in Darfur as ‘possibly the worst in the world today’, while Mukesh Kapila, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan told the BBC that the Sudan Government was preventing food and medical supplies from reaching Darfur province, either for security reasons, or in order to mask alleged human rights abuses: ‘one must say there is a prima facie case that some of the denials of access may well be related to the discomfort of the parties concerned to allow international witnesses’. Mr Kapila also warned that Darfur could be an arena of the worst humanitarian crisis in Sudan since tens of thousands lost their lives in the 1998 government induced famine in Bahr-al-Ghazal.

    As well as prosecuting a war, the GoS has launched a wave of arbitrary arrests in Darfur. On 18 December 2003 Sudanese authorities arrested three members of Hassan Al Turabi’s Popular National Congress Party (PNC) and Umma party politicians all of whom hail from Darfur, allegedly in connection with the failure of peace talks in Chad.

    On 23 December Amnesty International reported the arrest and incommunicado detention without charge of four men from the African Fur tribe by the National Security Forces in Nyala, expressing fears that the men may be subjected to torture.

    On 27 December 2003 human rights advocate Jammaly Hassan Jalal Aldean who hails from the Zaghawa tribe was detained without charge by Security forces in Al Fashir, northern Darfur

    On 2 January 2004 security operatives in Zalingy arrested of five men, again from the Fur ethnic group, on suspicion of belonging to the SLA. Both Amnesty International and SOAT highlighted the arrests expressing fear that the men may be subjected to torture Such tactics are routinely used in Darfur and the SLA and its suspected sympathisers and include beatings, electric shocks and lengthy detention in overcrowded centres where inmates receive inadequate food and are refused access to the outside world.

    SOAT also reported the arrest in Nyala of two men belonging to the Zaghawa tribe on 5 January, again on suspicion of supporting the SLA.

    On 9 January 2004 Amnesty International documented the incommunicado detention of 16 men, and again expressed fears that they may be at risk of torture or ill treatment.

    Just as government attacks in rural Darfur target African civilians, the recent wave of arrests in the towns is targeting the region’s white-collar sector. The overwhelming majority of the above mentioned detainees are from Darfur‘s professional sector. They are teachers, merchants, trade unionists, bankers, and civil servants. The only manual worker detained is a bank gatekeeper.


    CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
    The progress made so far during peace talks is a testimony to the continued engagement of the international community. The sudden decision by Sudan’s chief negotiator, First Vice President Ali Osman Taha, to undertake a (third) Haj to Mecca not only took chief IGAD mediator General Sumbeiywo by surprise, but also forced the suspension of the talks at a critical juncture. The move was evocative of previous government tactics of prevarication during peace negotiations. Consequently, it was interpreted by some observers as constituting a test of international resolve, and led to deepening unease regarding the GoS’s ultimate commitment to peace.

    It is vital that the international community maintains its focus and maintains its commitment beyond the signing of a peace treaty, since any treaty will only be sustained by firm international guarantees. To this end, it is essential that key countries immediately allocate sufficient monetary, manpower and material resources to the appropriate UN bodies so that these can be utilised in the immediate aftermath of a treaty.

    International engagement will also be required to end the conflict in Darfur. In fact, politicians and rebel leaders from the region are desperately requesting international intervention and are calling for humanitarian access, protection for displaced families and the positioning of independent international monitors in the area to deter continued human rights abuses. As one Darfur MP put it: ‘any negotiation that is not monitored by the international community will lead to nothing’.

    The situation in Darfur cries out for urgent international attention. It appears that key members of the international community are beginning to take notice. In a statement issued by the Irish presidency, the European Union (EU) expressed its serious concern regarding the plight of refugees from Darfur and called on both sides to respect the 3 September ceasefire, to ensure ‘the full respect for human rights and the protection of the civilian population, and to ensure ‘full and unimpeded access by relevant United Nations bodies and agencies and other humanitarian actors’ . More recently the Voice of America reported that the US State Department is becoming increasingly concerned that events in Darfur may undermine an agreement ending the war in southern Sudan. The news agency reports a senior State Department official as stating that the US is now pressing the Khartoum government to find a political solution to the Darfur conflict, since continued fighting in Darfur would call into question the durability of any commitments included in Kenya.

    Such pronouncements are encouraging. However, the people of Darfur require immediate international assistance. CSW calls on both the EU and the US to go further and facilitate a United Nations Security Council Resolution calling for a comprehensive ceasefire, the convening of all-inclusive peace talks that include the presence of high level international observers, an end to attacks on civilians, immediate and unimpeded humanitarian access, and the positioning of international monitors.

    A similar mechanism may also be needed to guarantee the durability of any final peace treaty that emerges from the negotiations currently underway in Kenya.

    Finally events in Darfur and the government’s continuing abuse of human rights elsewhere in northern Sudan serve to illustrate that the mandate of the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights was ended prematurely. It is vital that the Commission on Human Rights adopts a strong resolution condemning and calling for an end to arbitrary detention, torture and the suppression of press freedom in northern Sudan, and the ongoing violations of human rights and international humanitarian law in Darfur.




    [email protected]
    January 2004
                  

02-05-2004, 11:16 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)



    House of Lords Debate - Thursday 15 Jan 2004

    Sudan
    1.19 p.m.
    Baroness Cox rose to ask Her Majesty's Government what is their policy on recent developments in Sudan.
    The noble Baroness said: My Lords, I am most grateful to all noble Lords contributing to this debate, at a time that is so critical for the people of Sudan.
    Since the National Islamic Front (NIF) Islamist regime took power by military coup in 1989 and declared military jihad against all who oppose it, the toll of human suffering, with 2 million dead and 5 million displaced, exceeds the combined toll of Rwanda, Somalia and former Yugoslavia. There is now a ray of hope with the peace talks, which need strong encouragement and urgent measures to resolve outstanding problems.
    I shall focus primarily on the continuing violence and violations of human rights in Darfur and the unresolved status of the "marginalised areas". I wish first to refer to another concern: the imposition of Sharia law in the north and Khartoum in particular. If Khartoum remains the capital of Sudan, it must reflect the beliefs, traditions and culture of all Sudanese people. Many are deeply opposed to Sharia, which violates principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) such as equality before the law and freedom to choose and to change religion. Moreover, the NIF is implementing
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    harsh Sharia punishments, such as sentencing Intisar Bakri Abdulgader, a 16 year-old Christian girl to flogging with 100 lashes for adultery, while the man who forced her into this situation remains entirely free from any penalty. This sentence would violate the Convention Against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
    I turn to the continuing conflict in Darfur, where the situation is so grave that senior UN officials have warned of an impending human catastrophe: Jan Egeland, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs declared that the humanitarian crisis in Darfur is probably the,

    "worst in the world today".
    All the evidence demonstrates that the destruction of the primarily African Muslim peoples, through deliberate attacks on civilians by Khartoum-backed Arab militias and deliberate denial of urgently needed humanitarian relief amounts to "ethnic cleansing". That phrase was used explicitly by the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan, Mukesh Kapila, in a BBC radio interview on 18 December.
    Although he was making the point that the many reports of ethnic cleansing cannot presently be confirmed because of Khartoum's denial of access to humanitarian relief and international observers, other UN officials and Sudan analysts have been explicitly speaking of the "systematic" denial of humanitarian relief, as well as the "systematic" nature of militia attacks on non-combatant civilians with the "organised" destruction of the Fur, Masseleit, and the Zaghawa tribal groups.
    Also, a Channel 4 news report on 6 January alleged "ethnic cleansing", showing the first images taken inside Darfur, of ghost village after burnt ghost village, destroyed hospitals and mosques and blackened skeletons of burnt civilians. Old men, women and children, without food or possessions, stood stranded in the desert and testified to horrific and systematic attacks across the region. Pictures of Sudanese Government Antonov bombers flying overhead proved that those perpetrating the attacks are not merely northern tribes with a vendetta but the NIF Government.
    The scale of that catastrophe is enormous: MSF estimates that there are about 750,000 displaced people in Darfur; and that in December 30,000 had fled into Chad, with another 3,000 fleeing last week. The NIF claims that,

    "the [Sudanese] Government is firm on fully shouldering its responsibilities of protecting the lives and the property of citizens, and relief workers in Darfur",
    describes its substantial relief programmes. But all the evidence from NGOs, refugee testimonies and these first media reports belies its claims. Access by international NGOs is severely limited and their activities are very restricted. And there were reports of yet more aerial bombardment of civilians by the NIF
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    as recently as Monday of this week. Consideration should be given perhaps to indicting the NIF for crimes against humanity.
    The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Committee on Conscience concluded that Darfur has given new urgency to the committee's long-standing "genocide warning" for Sudan, which was previously focused on southern Sudan and the Nuba Mountains. The committee indicated that its,

    "warning was based on the following actions of the [military government] of Sudan: a divide-to-destroy strategy of pitting ethnic groups against each other, with enormous loss of civilian life; the use of mass starvation as a weapon of destruction; toleration of the enslavement of women and children by government-allied militias; the incessant bombing of hospitals, clinics, schools and other civilian and humanitarian targets; disruption and destabilization of the communities of those who flee the war zones to other parts of Sudan; and widespread persecution on account of race, ethnicity and religion"
    It concluded that,

    "taken individually, each of these actions is a disaster for the victims. Taken together, they threaten the physical destruction of entire groups".
    The International Crisis Group's most recent report declares that Khartoum-backed Arab militias in Darfur are attacking,

    "unprotected villages with no apparent link to the rebels other than their ethnic profile";
    and Amnesty International has warned that,

    "the situation in Darfur is at risk of rapidly degenerating into a full-scale civil war where ethnicity is manipulated".
    The conclusion is that there is compelling evidence that the Khartoum Government is "largely responsible" for the human rights and humanitarian crisis in Darfur. It is intolerable that the international community continues to allow what all evidence suggests is genocide. Therefore, the EU's recent call for a cease-fire, for the protection of civilians and for unimpeded humanitarian access is welcome.
    However, urgent international action is also essential. Khartoum's claim of "national sovereignty" must not be allowed to conceal the desperate plight of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians or hinder access to them. One can only surmise that the failure of the international community to ensure humanitarian intervention derives from an unwillingness to disturb diplomatic initiatives involved with the peace talks. But that is a dangerous misunderstanding because, unless the international community shows its concern for the people of Darfur, and the peoples of the designated marginalised regions of Nuba Mountains, Abyei Province and Blue Nile, as well as other marginalised peoples, such as the Beia people of eastern Sudan, peace will be very partial and ultimately unsustainable.
    All these people have suffered at the hands of the regime in Khartoum—brutality, discrimination and a lack of representation and of a share of the national wealth. At present, they may reasonably conclude that the international vision of peace is focused only on Khartoum and the south. Unless all the people of Sudan have cause to believe that their interests—indeed their physical and cultural survival—are enshrined in any peace agreements, those agreements may not produce a lasting peace. The incentive to resort to armed
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    insurrection could prove irresistible. And, if Khartoum sees that the international community is willing to ignore the massive humanitarian crisis in Darfur and to condone its denial of access to humanitarian aid, it may conclude that it can remain obdurate and achieve outcomes on its terms.
    The United States, the other countries in the troika—Norway and the UK—as well as Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) countries, must look comprehensively at Sudan's problems if the goal is to secure a just and lasting peace.
    Perhaps I may therefore conclude by asking the Minister whether her Majesty's Government will urge: the NIF regime to open all parts of Sudan, especially the conflict-wracked regions of Darfur, to international humanitarian and human rights organisations; urge all involved in the peace talks to ensure that the wishes of all those living in the marginalised areas are taken fully into account in any decisions concerning their future status; ensure that any funds for reconstruction are conditional on full and transparent implementation of all aspects of the agreement; use their influence to ensure the protection of fundamental human rights, according to the UDHR and other international conventions, for all citizens of Sudan; and, finally, with regard to Darfur, work alongside other EU member states to facilitate the passing of a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for a comprehensive cease-fire, the convening of peace talks that include the presence of high-level international observers, an end to attacks on civilians, immediate and unimpeded humanitarian access, and the positioning of international monitors.
    The people of Sudan believe that Britain is uniquely placed to help. They do not forget our historic relationship, which bequeathed many benefits but also a legacy of bitter conflicts, for which we carry an historic responsibility.
    I look forward to hearing from the Minister how her Majesty's Government will fulfil that responsibility at this critical juncture, helping Africa's largest nation to move forward from carnage and catastrophe to peace, justice and prosperity. The opportunity for this sea change has not been so propitious for decades; it is an opportunity that must not be lost.
    1.30 p.m.
    Lord Clarke of Hampstead: My Lords, it is indeed a pleasure to follow the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, and to thank her for the opportunity to discuss recent events in Sudan. I pay tribute to her for her untiring efforts on behalf of the people of Sudan and, as the House well knows, in many other parts of the world.
    There are many issues that are matters of concern to all who want to see positive moves by the Sudanese authorities that could lead towards a less repressive set of policies being implemented by the Government of that country. This debate, short as it is, will, I am sure, note that there have been some encouraging breakthroughs in the peace talks that have taken place in Naivasha. At the same time, events in the country itself indicate that the Government of Sudan continue with their policies of repression and the abuse of
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 710
    human rights. In fact, comment has been made that the peace talks are being used by the Sudanese Government as a means of avoiding the necessity of fighting a war on more than one front.
    Human rights are still being abused; people living in northern Sudan continue to have their basic human rights violated. The right to free press is still a long way from the people of Sudan. It had been the hope of many that press freedom would be a reality, following a decree by President al-Bashir last August. He had decreed that state censorship of newspapers should be lifted. That hope was soon dashed. Censorship, together with regular suspension of the right of some newspapers to publish, continues. Within days of the President's decree, the daily Al Alwan was suspended on 2 September. Originally banned until 24 September, a further ban was imposed two days later. It was eventually lifted on 16 October.
    Similar censorship and banning of other newspapers has taken place. The Khartoum Monitor, an English-language daily, was suspended on 13 September, in direct defiance of an Appeal Court ruling that had quashed an earlier cancellation of that paper's licence. It was allowed to reappear later in October.
    Five and a half weeks later, the paper was suspended again, the seventh time in two years. The allegations against the Khartoum Monitor were that it promoted slavery, worked against the peace process and worked against the Government. Other papers, including Al Azimah, have had suspensions and bans imposed on them by the Government.
    Not only newspapers are affected by interference; the allegations that are so often made against the press have also been made against the independent television channel Al-Jazeera. It has been alleged that in December, representatives of the Sudanese national security forces visited its offices and informed staff of the Government's displeasure at some of its programmes. Later in the month, on 17 December, security operatives raided the agency's Khartoum offices and arrested Salih Adam Belo, a journalist, and his cameraman, Hamid Tirab. The security people also confiscated their equipment. Mr Belo was accused of transmitting programmes that were,

    "stuffed with false information and poor, biased analyses, with pictures and scenes selected to serve its ends".
    The National Security Authority, which arrested Mr Belo, has the power to detain people without charge or trial for up to nine months. The evidence cited against Mr Belo included accusations that he had transmitted programmes reporting on tuberculosis, landmine victims and events in the western Darfur region. Mr Belo was released from Kober prison on 24 December. He continues to undergo interrogation.
    On 1 January, the security authorities are reported to have said to the Government in Khartoum that they wanted the licence that allows Al-Jazeera to have an office in the country revoked. Mr Belo is one of many courageous journalists who tried to collect and publish the facts about what is happening in their country.
    There have been protests both locally and internationally. The German news agency, DPA, reported that Sudanese journalists organised a sit-in at
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 711
    the offices of Al Ayam and Khartoum Monitor. They were protesting about the banning of newspapers. More than 30 journalists representing 17 newspapers have signed a statement that by taking the action they did, they hope to,

    "guarantee rights of expression and to enhance freedoms".
    They called for the lifting of the bans and for fair trials for the two papers.
    There is insufficient time to mention other facts about this repression and the denial of people to read or see what is happening in their country. I would, however, like to refer to one other area of concern—the treatment of human rights defenders and trade unionists. The harassment of trade unionists and human rights defenders has also continued. On 21 December last year, the NSA arrested nine members of the General Trade Union Council at a peaceful meeting in a house at Shambat, Khartoum North. The men were interrogated about the activities of their organisation. They were released seven and a half hours later and ordered to report to the agency's offices the following morning at 11 o'clock. The following day, the men were not questioned but held until 6 p.m., and again ordered to report back the following day.
    On 28 December, the NSA arrested Dr Madawi Ibrahim Adam, a human rights activist and consultant engineer at Lambda Engineering Company. He is also chairperson of the Sudan Social Development Organisation, a registered non-governmental organisation. Dr Adam was arrested at his home in Omdurman; security force operatives are said to have searched the house, seized documents and damaged the building. One of the documents seized was a tender for a project to develop water stations in southern Sudan.
    Within Sudan, there are others, and other organisations, who want to express their concern about the treatment meted out to representatives of NGOs. Students and the Sudan Organisation Against Torture continue to highlight many of the abuses that are taking place.
    I conclude by asking my noble friend the Minister to press our Government to let the Sudanese authorities know of the concern that many outside of Sudan have for the people of that country, who are looking forward to the day when free speech and the defence of basic human rights become a reality in Sudan.
    1.36 p.m.
    The Earl of Sandwich: My Lords, the prospect of a genuine peace agreement in Sudan is obviously tremendous news. I apologise to the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, for being late for her speech. She has pursued this issue for longer than I can remember, and she must feel some satisfaction. Congratulations are due to all the negotiators, but it is also time to recognise the commitment of this Government and the valuable work put in by our FCO envoys and their staff who helped put the talks back on track last summer—not, for once, overshadowed by the United States, whose pressure behind the scenes has also contributed. But it is not over yet.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 712
    The wealth-sharing agreement signed last week was another milestone, given the bitterness of the oil war in Upper Nile and the resulting internal divisions in the south. Oil revenues now amount to more than two-thirds of Sudan's export earnings, and a 50:50 split, supervised by a national commission of experts, will give the south a huge psychological advantage as well as an economic leap forward. However, we are not there yet. This is only the first stage and there are still substantive issues to resolve, not least control over oil in Abyei in Kordofan and the other disputed regions. Agreements in lakeside hotels in Kenya seem very far removed from the frontline in western Sudan. The Foreign Minister has suggested having a final signature in Africa—contrary to what Senator Danforth is proposing—which seems more appropriate than Washington.
    In Darfur, the collapse of talks sponsored by the Chad President last month has brought further conflict. Two previous ceasefires have failed. According to Amnesty International, more than 200 people, mostly women and children, were reportedly killed this month, when scores of villages around Zalingei in West Darfur were again attacked by Government armed forces and Janjawid militias, including armed rebels from Chad. According to refugee accounts, the marauders came on horses and camels. Homes were burnt, livestock and possessions were looted and many children were abducted. Some 7,000 have been displaced in the latest raids, some crossing the Chad border and most now needing food and medical attention.
    Since last April, more than 700,000 people have fled their homes, mostly to other towns in Darfur, while more than 90,000 have crossed the border to Chad. Our own DfID is supporting relief work through the NGOs. UN aid workers intend to move 15,000 refugees away from the frontier to protect them from cross-border attacks by Sudanese militia and aircraft. The picture is extremely complicated because the dominant ethnic group, the Zaghawa, straddle both sides of the border and have allegiance to different political parties.
    The UN estimates that 3,000 have died in this conflict alone. Human rights agencies like Justice Africa and Anti-Slavery International fear a return to the pattern of civil war in Bahr el-Ghazal in which government sponsored militia have carried out murderous raids and abductions over many years. As an ASI Council member, I do hope the Government of Sudan recognise the strength of feeling on abductions, given all the detailed work done by their own committees with the Dinka people with the support of UNICEF and Save the Children.
    As the noble Lord, Lord Clarke, has already said, activists in Darfur and elsewhere, human rights workers and journalists are still being held in detention without charge and many have reported the use of torture. An unelected government that continue to deny their citizens free speech and commit well documented human rights violations are not a government who deserve international recognition as a party to the new peace agreement.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 713
    President al-Bashir is not yet behaving like a peacemaker. He has extended the emergency for a year and is seeking an internal military solution in Darfur just at a time when he has gained some international respect in peace talks with the south. By talking with different voices Khartoum will soon lose diplomatic credibility if it does not reopen talks with some mediator from outside, other than Chad which is already a party. At the very least, the GoS and the SPLM should jointly agree to find a solution to Darfur outside the IGAD peace process.
    Will Her Majesty's Government join in international protests against the latest raids in Darfur this month, including the use of aircraft by the GoS? Will they urge both parties to the final agreement that it should contain a clause committing them to a peaceful resolution of the conflict in Darfur? Does the Minister agree that it would be premature for the parties to sign before that is done?
    Colonel Garang says that peace is now irreversible, but many other critical issues are now being discussed such as the joint armed force and the release of POWs with demobilisation much further down the line. The UN is now to take on a monitoring task through the monitoring and protection teams and I assume that the UK will play some part in that.
    Power-sharing arrangements under an interim national administration still have to be decided. Once signed, the peace deal is to remain in force during a six-year period when southern Sudan is at last able to enjoy a degree of autonomy. Like many risky diplomatic deals, this one is built on blocks that are not yet all in place. A successful agreement presupposes reconciliation in the south, which is not a foregone conclusion. The enthusiastic public reception given to the SPLA in Khartoum in November showed that it is ready for power, but a key question is the sharing of jobs in the interim administration and whether the SPLM can bring together the multitude of small parties and political factions from the past. In the north, the picture is not much clearer. The Umma and DUP parties are split and Hassan al-Turabi remains a wild card. His Popular National Congress is now drawing people away from the NIF dominated National Congress.
    Finally, the NGOs, especially those with expertise in human rights and democracy, will have an important role in building confidence in the new administration. The new peace agreement must bring with it a stronger legal framework, leading to a new atmosphere of openness and a greater involvement of civil society in national and local government, and in meeting—above all—the urgent reconstruction needs of the country.
    1.43 p.m.
    Lord Alton of Liverpool: My Lords, my noble friend Lord Sandwich, along with the noble Lord, Lord Clarke of Hampstead, rightly paid tribute to the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, for so consistently keeping events in Sudan before your Lordships' House. I am happy to join them in that tribute. I also join my noble friend in paying
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 714
    tribute to the role played by the Minister, the noble Baroness, Lady Symons of Vernham Dean, in constantly and intelligently dealing with the peace process and keeping us informed of what is happening in Sudan. Recently, she will recall the Question from the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, about the situation in Darfur. Along with others, I asked supplementary Questions about that and was grateful to the Minister for the reply that she gave on that occasion. I look forward to hearing what she has to say today about the continuing problems in Darfur.
    Obviously we all welcome the progress made in the peace talks in Kenya, particularly the agreement on wealth sharing that was signed last week. That agreement has managed to cover a number of crucial areas, including the division of revenues, the management of oil resources, and the reconstruction of some of the areas devastated by the war. I wish to talk especially about the role of oil, in the past and future, in helping to facilitate that process of reconstruction.
    The agreement seems to give the ravaged areas of southern Sudan, which I visited just over a year ago, a fair deal. Just as importantly, it gives hope to those people whose lives have been adversely affected by the exploitation of the oil fields. In particular, I welcome the provisions in the agreement that those people who have suffered are entitled to some form of compensation. That the Government of Sudan is required to take action in cases in which the exploitation has caused

    "fundamental social and environmental problems",
    is also progress.
    In parenthesis, I might add that the Auxiliary Bishop of Torit, Bishop Akio Johnson Mutek—who has had nine or 10 attempts made on his life—specifically raised the involvement of British oil companies with me during my visit to Torit. He vividly encapsulated the issue by his remark that,

    "every barrel of your oil is half full of our blood".
    We in the West bear a significant responsibility for financing a government that has practised genocide against its own people. During the past week I have written to the chairman of trustees of one of our most respected major British charities pointing out that their own complicity in the industry has been concurrent with running a disinvestment campaign. In 2000, the charity first asked shareholders and pension funds to consider disinvesting from oil companies operating in Sudan, because they were fuelling the war. It named British Petroleum, the largest minority shareholder in PetroChina, as an indirect investor.
    In 2001, the charity called for an EU ban on investment in these oil companies as the only way to ensure that

    "European business is not financing the war nor exacerbating human rights violations".
                  

02-05-2004, 11:20 PM

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تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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    On that occasion, the charity named Royal Dutch/Shell as well as BP.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 715
    Today, through the European Coalition on Oil in Sudan, the charity continues to urge,

    "shareholders, pension funds and institutional investors to divest from companies active in Sudan's oil extracting industry or trading in Nile Blend Crude, including indirect investors such as BP".
    Although the charity has called on others to disinvest, it has failed to do so itself. It talks much about "positive engagement", but it has failed to produce any example of engaging with these companies through its investments. Throughout the whole campaign, the charity has continued to hold shares in both BP and Shell through its own company pension fund. If its own arguments are correct, then it would have to accept that it is complicit in the killing of thousands of Sudanese Christians, animists, and those Muslims who remained in the south.
    Despite repeated telephone calls following my letter, I am disappointed to say that I have not had a response from the charity in time for this debate. All of us—especially charities running disinvestment campaigns—need to consider carefully how we use funds. Charities, especially, have a duty to consider the churches and individuals who support them, and should know how their actions will appear to their supporters. On the positive side, oil interests will play a significant part in the shaping of the new Sudan. Those who have investments should, at the very minimum, use their leverage to engage companies in pressing for change.
    There remain several outstanding issues on which companies, charities and those who invest in them could act in assisting the peace talks to find a way forward. One of those relates to the proposed system of power sharing, including the rotating presidency, and the quota of ministerial posts that will be given to the SPLA. It is important that the SPLA receives a fair deal here. In particular, it is worth noting that, at present, the NIF Government has numerous parallel systems that govern security and other areas of government, and these may hinder SPLA ministers from exercising any real power.
    The relationship between the proposed tiers of government is another area that needs greater clarification and may require further safeguards. There are three tiers proposed for the interim period: national government, the authority governing southern Sudan, and the authorities governing the states and regions. How these different tiers will relate to each other has not yet been properly resolved. Another problematic issue regularly raised by the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, is worth reiterating—the issue of the future arrangements for the three marginalized areas—namely, the Nuba Mountains, the Southern Blue Nile, which is also known as the Funj Region, and Abyei district. That is crucial. Although those areas do not form part of southern Sudan geographically, they share the same ethnicity. People from those areas have fought alongside the south and successive northern governments have consistently underdeveloped them. It is important that, in any final peace deal, the treatment that has taken place in the past is acknowledged and they are treated in the future with
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 716
    fairness and justice. Companies with economic muscle should use it to insist that Khartoum takes that question, and the others that I have raised, seriously.
    Those outstanding issues, together with past experience, help to explain why many southerners, while welcoming the progress made so far, continue to be very wary about the sincerity of the NIF. As one southern observer called Natalino Losuba Mana, who runs Norwegian People's Aid in the Yei county, says:

    "No one is celebrating yet. We'll wait to see these promises of peace fulfilled rather than living in hope. We still feel we will make a very good agreement that will never get beyond paper".
    To conclude, the Minister has said that Her Majesty's Government are,

    "committed to helping the Sudanese parties reach a comprehensive peace agreement".—[Official Report, 6/11/03; col. 951.]
    I welcome that approach and hope that our debate today will assist her and her advisers as they continue to help the peace talks to move forward.
    1.51 p.m.
    Lord Avebury: My Lords, I join in the congratulations to the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, which all noble Lords have expressed, not only on returning to the question of Sudan in this House for the nth time, but also for the indefatigable and incredibly brave work that she does in Sudan itself.
    A year ago, I said that the Government would have to be generous in reaching a compromise between the SPLA's demand for 60 per cent of the oil revenues and the offer of 10 per cent that was then on the table. As we have heard, they were so prepared, and the final deal of 50–50 between north and south is a fair one, as the noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, acknowledged. The extension to non-oil revenues is sensible too.
    The establishment of a dual banking system, with an Islamic no-interest section in the north and a conventional section in the south will be a challenging project, because the Bank of Southern Sudan must be established in a vast territory that has had no banking facilities throughout the war. The common currency, the free movement of capital, and semi-independent fiscal regimes in north and south will create formidable difficulties in the management of the system, and the detailed regulations will need a great deal of input from both Islamic and conventional banking experts in the outside world.
    Many issues are still outstanding that must be resolved, including the power sharing referred to by the noble Lord, Lord Alton, and the status of the Nuba Mountains, the Southern Blue Nile and Abyei. I see that the first two of those territories are well on the way to a solution, but the situation in Abyei still poses formidable difficulties as it is home to a largely Dinka population, and a number of SPLA leaders were from that area of the country. However, President al-Beshir was adamant in a nationally televised speech last November that the 1956 boundary between north and south that is the legacy of independence was immutable.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 717
    There are also security arrangements to be made, including the number and composition of the international ceasefire monitoring force, the relocation of belligerent troops, including particularly the repatriation of government of Sudan forces to the north, and the prevention of incursions in the area of the border between north and south. Details remain to be agreed of the referendum implementation mechanism for the vote on the self-determination of the south in five years' time.
    Meanwhile, apart from the peace agreement between north and south, there are other problems, as noble Lords have mentioned. Notably, there is the crisis in Darfur where, as the International Crisis Group pointed out a month ago,

    "an end to the war in the south could become the catalyst for a new and bloody chapter in Darfur unless negotiations are broadened to include western rebels".
    We must face the fact that there is in Darfur an overwhelming humanitarian catastrophe, comparable in scale with what happened in Kosovo prior to the international intervention there. Noble Lords may need to reflect on the difference in treatment between Kosovo and Darfur, in the sense that there has been no call whatever, on behalf of the victims of the conflict, for the international community to go in and help.
    As the noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, said, 3,000 have been killed in that conflict from the outbreak in February 2003 to the end of the year. For those who have fled across the border into Chad, I have the figure of 95,000—and 30,000 in December alone, according to UNHCR. Hundreds of thousands are estimated to be internally displaced in Darfur itself. Precise estimates are impossible because international humanitarian agencies are kept out, but Amnesty International says that it has received lists of hundreds of civilians killed and villages destroyed, as well as the actual names of children said to have been abducted by government-supported militia.
    The picture given by refugees in Chad is the same. They told UNHCR that the militia attacked villages, first shooting people caught in the streets. Starting early in the morning, the militia raid village houses, stealing everything including livestock. One refugee from the village of Garuma was quoted in the UNHCR report as saying that on 2 January 150 militiamen arrived on horses and camels in his village. He fled with his pregnant wife and their five children and hid in the surrounding hills, where his wife gave birth one day after they had escaped. The militia set fire to the scrub around the hill and the family had to take refuge again on another small hillock. The entire population of his village—about 2,000 people—had gone into the surrounding countryside or moved to the nearby villages or crossed the border into Chad.
                  

02-05-2004, 11:21 PM

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تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)



    When I raised the matter of Darfur in the debate on 6 November, to which the noble Lord, Lord Alton, referred, the Minister acknowledged the problem in Darfur and said that we would continue to press for unfettered access. She did not respond to the suggestion that the African Union should consider the wider implications of the conflict. However, there are now African voices, such as the respected Kenyan newspaper, The Nation, calling for the international community to
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 718
    seek ways in which to address the crisis in the region. Chad is a poor country and its eastern region bordering the epicentre of the crisis in western Darfur is semi-arid. It simply cannot cope with a flood of destitute refugees, and Sudan should be told in no uncertain terms that its conduct towards civilians in Darfur is intolerable.
    The noble Lord, Lord Clarke, covered amply the serious problems of human rights. I am particularly concerned about the alleged rule of the Sharia that requires 100 lashes to be imposed on unmarried women who become pregnant after being raped. That includes two cases that have been taken up by our ambassador in Khartoum of teenage girls whose appeals against sentence are still awaited. As I wrote to Chris Mullin in November, we have to say plainly that such penalties are unacceptable. He replied a month ago that we would press for a response to the representations already made about those cases. It would not be sufficient for the girls' appeals to be granted on some technicality; it is the law of zina itself that is contrary to natural justice and should be repealed. I hope that we will not be deterred by false considerations of cultural sensitivity from saying so to the Sudanese Government.
    There are also the numerous cases, to which the noble Lord, Lord Clarke, referred, of detention without trial, execution and attacks on freedom of the press. The Sudanese Foreign Minister, Mustapha Osman Ismail, says that he wants a final peace agreement with the south to be signed in Africa and not in Washington, as President Bush has suggested, to show that Africans can solve African problems. That is an excellent proposal. Why should not Khartoum demonstrate that Sudan can also deal with its other problems by simultaneously stopping the attacks in Darfur and ending cruel punishments, executions and arbitrary detentions? It might gain a reputation for itself not only for statesmanship in ending the north-south conflict but for a new initiative on human rights in the whole of Africa.
    1.59 p.m.
    Baroness Rawlings: My Lords, I warmly congratulate my noble friend Lady Cox for securing this timely debate on the situation in Sudan, and add my tributes for all the marvellous work that she does to those made by other noble Lords today. As I said before, and I will say again, it is especially important that we discuss the situation in Sudan regularly, because, as many of your Lordships have pointed out, it is extremely volatile and is subject to almost weekly change. There is no doubt that everyone is delighted by steps towards peace in a country that has been dominated by a civil war for the past 20 years. We welcome the agreement to share government revenues, particularly from oil, as we heard from the noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, as well as the planned new authority in the south of the country.
    The situation in Sudan has come a long way. We congratulate al those involved in bringing the agreement about. For the Islamist regime now to say that it is prepared to allow more freedom of religion and to let the south hold a referendum on succession in six years time,
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 719
    along with power sharing, is a significant shift. However, there are still vital issues that, if left neglected, could undo all the progress made so far. I speak of the regions ignored by the agreement. First, the agreement fails to express clearly how the marginal areas of the Southern Blue Nile, the Nuba mountains and the Abyei will be governed, as mentioned by the noble Lord, Lord Alton of Liverpool, and the noble Lord, Lord Avebury. What steps are being taken to ensure that these area interests are represented and will come under the new authority? Of course, the most significant of ignored regions is Darfur, as mentioned by my noble friend Baroness Cox, and most other noble Lords.
    Conflict in the three states of Darfur in western Sudan has brought a huge humanitarian crisis to the Chadian border. Fighting continues in this region, which is excluded from the agreement signed the other day. According to the UN World Food Programme, it has caused the displacement of around one million people, about 95,000 refugees, including up to 30,000 during December, who have fled fighting between the forces loyal to the government in Khartoum and the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement, as well as tribal and ethnic clashes.
    The UN has recently launched an emergency appeal for 11 million dollars to cover the food needs of 60,000 of the most vulnerable Sudanese refugees. Will the Minister tell us what contribution HMG will make to this fund? What other support are they providing to try to prevent worsening of the humanitarian crisis? As well as the refugees in Chad, there are one million internally displaced people. Killings and damage to land contribute to this year's poor agricultural production, despite earlier promises of a satisfactory yield. The situation in the south of Darfur is apparently especially precarious due to the desert environment of the area.
    On Monday 12 January, the UN reported that the needs of the Darfur region could not be met due to insecurity. A spokesman said that only 15 per cent of the people are in areas accessible by the UN. The prolific supply of small arms, increased banditry have led to a complete breakdown in law and order on the ground. Meanwhile, the UN Children's Fund has reported growing numbers of displaced children working as domestic labour, prostitutes and beggars. It has been reported too that the Sudanese Government are not fully protecting the lives and property of relief workers in the Darfur region, let alone its citizens. This will be the end of the tentative steps to peace in Sudan unless it is immediately addressed. I hope that the noble Baroness will tell us in winding up what Her Majesty's Government are planning to do about the continued problems in Darfur and its integration into the rest of Sudan.
    Christian Aid, among other NGOs, has expressed a particular concern regarding the effective verification and monitoring of the agreement, including ceasefire arrangements. There are still unconfirmed reports of fighting in south Sudan, including attacks on the oil fields. Will the Minister tell the House what action or plans Her Majesty's Government are undertaking to
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 720
    support the monitoring of the situation, and what measures are in place to bring parties to account if they do so breach the agreements?
    Now that there is an agreement in at least part of Sudan, what measures are being taken to implement and support a thorough survey of the condition of the country? We are particularly worried that the devastating spread of HIV/AIDS, the displacement of large numbers of people, and the rape that tends to accompany warfare, will have created ideal conditions for the further rapid and widespread transmission of the virus. This support, as we have seen, can significantly affect a country's ability to get back on its feet.
    I have touched on but some of the main points surrounding the situation in Sudan as a whole. Darfur continues to be a critical issue that cannot be ignored. It undermines the great steps forward taken in the current agreement, and places at risk the future development and reduction of poverty in the country as a whole.
    2.5 p.m.
    Baroness Symons of Vernham Dean: My Lords, I am grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, for bringing the recent developments in Sudan to the attention of the House. I welcome her continued dedication to the plight of the Sudanese people, and I thank her for all the advice that she has given to the Government on this issue. It has been valuable to have this relationship with her.
    The last time we discussed developments in Sudan, things were looking more positive than for some time before that. Excellent progress continues to be made on the peace talks in Naivasha between the Government and the SPLM. Both sides have now described the peace talks as irreversible, and we hope that they will continue to provide a framework agreement soon. Although problems persist in some areas—and we have heard a great deal about that in the past 45 minutes—there is, at last, a real chance for peace in Sudan, and a real chance to end the suffering of the Sudanese people.
    It has been freely acknowledged around the House that as is so often the case in peace talks, we are investing heavily in this process, while at the same time acknowledging, as so many of your Lordships have, that there continue to be some terrible problems. There are problems around human rights, including, as my noble friend Lord Clarke of Hampstead reminded us, press freedom, including some of the appalling punishments that your Lordships have described. There is also the enormously difficult situation in Darfur. The noble Baroness concentrated much of her address on the situation in Darfur, but she also rightly acknowledged that the peace process is going ahead, and that point was also acknowledged by my noble friend Lord Clarke.
    On 7 January, the Government and the SPLM signed an agreement on wealth-sharing arrangements, which is an important factor in what we are discussing. That provides for the division of oil revenues, a point to which the noble Lord, Lord Alton, rightly drew our
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 721
    attention, the banking arrangements and the creation of a joint transition team to prepare budget estimates and raise funds for reconstruction. This is a significant step towards peace in Sudan. I would be happy to arrange a full briefing on this issue, if noble Lords have not yet had one.
    I recognise the strength of the argument that the noble Lord, Lord Alton, put forward about disinvestment. I hope that he will agree that while we are making progress in this area, and while we may be pressing forward on the peace issues, now may not be the time to press the lobby on disinvestment. The oil in Sudan should be used for the benefit of all. It is the oil that may provide the platform for the improvement overall in the conditions in Sudan. I hope that the agreement signed on 7 January will allow us to give that greater reality on the ground.
    The parties are continuing to talk about resolving the remaining issues on power-sharing in the three conflict areas of Southern Blue Nile, the Nuba Mountains and Abyei. The noble Lord, Lord Avebury, reminded us of that point. There are important issues to be resolved here, and there must be a genuinely inclusive, democratic system of governance that respects the rights of all Sudanese people. That is the best way to ensure popular ownership of the peacekeeping arrangements and thus the sustainability of any future peace arrangements. I assure the noble Baroness, Lady Rawlings—who made some very forceful points on some of these areas of outstanding difficulties—that those matters have not yet been resolved and are still under discussion. The points that she has made are very well taken in those continuing peace discussions.
    Given the progress already made, the parties hope to have a framework agreement within weeks, and a comprehensive package wi7thin a few months. There is still work to be done on those issues. If we are able to get such a comprehensive package it will be a real achievement, one to which the United Kingdom will have made a significant contribution through our special representative for Sudan, Alan Goulty, and the joint Foreign Office/DfID Sudan Unit, as well as the embassy in Khartoum.
    Many of your Lordships have played a crucial role in that, including the noble Lord, Lord Alton, and the noble Baroness, Lady Cox. I should also like to place on record ministerial thanks for all the work and commitment that officials in both the FCO and DfID have dedicated to this project in the past 18 months, a time when we have been in constant contact with all parties, offering support and advice.
    Let us turn to the issue of United Kingdom financial assistance. As many of your Lordships said, ultimately it does not matter what is written on the piece of paper—what really matters is how that piece of paper is implemented. Of course what is on the paper is important, but the real issue is what happens on the ground. Implementation is going to be even more difficult than negotiating the agreement. The support of the international community, as many of your Lordships have acknowledged, will be crucial to ensuring that the peace holds.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 722
    The noble Baroness, Lady Rawlings, asked various questions on UK financial assistance. We have allocated £28 million to Sudan for 2003–04. There are plans for a donor conference in Oslo once a comprehensive peace agreement is secured. We would expect our contribution to increase significantly in future years. We will of course need to co-ordinate carefully with the United Nations and other governments and non-governmental organisations working in Sudan. Co-operation and careful planning are the only way to ensure that Sudan gets maximum benefit from the external assistance that it receives.
    Sudan will also need our help to meet the humanitarian, recovery and reintegration needs of its people. The noble Lord, Lord Alton, was absolutely right when he spoke about the importance of this implementation issue. The UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations has already carried out a scoping mission to plan for a UN peace support operation. We will continue to help with the demobilisation, disarmament and reintegration of combatants, and local level peace-building work.
    There will also be an opportunity for Sudan to develop more effective systems of governance, particularly of justice and security, and in terms of public administration. That of course includes the development of the capacity of civil society in the fields of human and child rights, gender and legal awareness so that they are able to engage with donors as partners and critically engage with the government.
    There will also be much work to be done with the Sudanese to develop and implement policies that really do benefit the poor people. The noble Lord used some compelling language about poverty in relation to the oil industry. We acknowledge that it is enormously important to address the poverty issue. Improved macroeconomic management will be key in that endeavour, as will resolution of Sudan's debt problems. Once an agreement has been signed, the UK will chair a support group of key international creditors and donors to help ensure timely co-ordinated action for clearance of debt arrears. I hope that that, too, is a piece of good news.
    The relevant international agencies and financial institutions are planning joint assessment missions in both the north and the south to look at the requirements for development assistance. The Sudanese parties must obviously be fully involved in the process and feel full ownership of the outcomes of such a process.
    Many noble Lords were very worried about the human rights issues. We continue to be very concerned indeed about the human rights position in the whole of Sudan, regardless of religious or ethnic background. The promotion of human rights through advocacy with the government and support for NGOs remains one of this Government's priorities.
    I assure your Lordships that we raise the human rights issue on a regular basis, both bilaterally and as part of the EU/Sudan dialogue. Indeed, my right honourable friend the Secretary of State for International Development, Hilary Benn, discussed the human rights situation with the President of Sudan and others during his visit to
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 723
    Khartoum on 10 December. He then raised the issue of the cross-amputation sentence on a 16 year-old boy who has been accused of armed robbery.
    I assure the noble Lord, Lord Avebury, that we are also raising the sentence of flogging on the 16 year-old girl to whom he referred. The punishment has been postponed until 23 January. I am not clear at this juncture whether this is merely a postponement or whether it will be a rehearing of the sentence, which is indeed a savage and terrible one. I undertake to keep the noble Lord informed on that as he has made such a point of raising it with my honourable friend.
    The question of Sharia law is a very difficult one; it raises a whole range of issues. We respect the view that Sharia law has some part to play. However, I am bound to say that we also share the view of the noble Lord, Lord Avebury, that the application of these very extreme punishments is inconsistent with international human rights standards and with Sudan's obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. I hope that that gives him the explicit assurance that he seeks.
    We have also raised the issues raised by my noble friend Lord Clarke of Hampstead about the suppression of freedom of the press. Our ambassador in Khartoum spoke to the Minister of Justice about this matter on 22 December. We continue to press on that issue.
    Similarly, we continue to press on the issue surrounding the recent report of arrests of political activists, supporters of NGOs and trades unionists. Our embassy in Khartoum has raised these issues with the Government in Sudan who have acknowledged our concerns and who have indeed undertaken to look into these matters and report back to us. I shall of course report back to the noble Lord on that.
    We need to monitor all these issues very closely. We were disappointed that, despite our hard work and that of our EU partners, we did not win the vote on the UN Commission on Human Rights last year. It was lost, as many of your Lordships know, on 16 April 2003. The defeat meant the termination of the mandate of the special rapporteur. We now have to consider how to tackle this issue in 2004. I should also tell your Lordships very quickly that, last week, in the margins of the regional conference on democracy and human rights held in Sanaa, my noble and learned friend Lord Goldsmith was able to discuss some of these issues with the Sudanese Foreign Minister. I hope that that news also is welcome to your Lordships.
    I still have some time until the 1.30 p.m. restart time. With your Lordships' permission, perhaps I can take three or four more minutes to say something about what happened in Darfur. Many of your Lordships concentrated your remarks on the concerns that remain in Darfur. Your Lordships are right that the situation is very worrying. Insecurity in Darfur means that there is limited access, and so there is limited ability to assess the situation properly on the ground. However, as the noble Lord, Lord Avebury, pointed out, the requirements in all sectors—food, water and
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 724
    shelter—are enormous. I think that the noble Lord used the word "catastrophic" at one point. These are real problems.
    Civilian protection also is a major concern, with repeated reports of human rights abuses perpetrated by various factions, as described by your Lordships this afternoon. Against that background, the breakdown of the peace talks—these are of course separate peace talks—between the government and the Sudan Liberation Movement was a severe blow. All sides should know from bitter experience that a military solution is not in prospect and that peace and reconciliation is the only way forward to a brighter future for Darfur.
    Our ambassador in Khartoum and the UK special representative speak to the Government of Sudan and the various Darfur movements on an almost daily basis. We are fully engaged; that is the point which I am very anxious to get over to your Lordships. Indeed, the special representative is in the region this week and has held discussions with the First Vice-President, among others.
    By providing for a truly decentralised federal system, the overall Sudan peace agreement should help address some of the root causes of the conflict in Darfur. But in the immediate short-term a ceasefire must be re-established to allow unfettered humanitarian access. We have offered our good offices to all parties to help them reach a peaceful solution. We have also suggested, as many of your Lordships have, that there may be a role for the international community in assisting in the implementation of a peace deal.
    The noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, also raised points on unimpeded humanitarian access. It is absolutely vital that unimpeded access is given. That is another point that has been raised over and over again.
    The noble Baroness, Lady Rawlings, wanted to know how we are monitoring these issues. In the past few days Her Majesty's Government have agreed to provide a temporary senior humanitarian affairs officer to assist the United Nations humanitarian co-ordinator and humanitarian agencies on the ground to strengthen the continuing United Nations and international crisis response. Therefore, we, in this country, are making another effort to put another person on the ground for the monitoring purposes which I acknowledge are enormously important. I assure the noble Earl, Lord Sandwich, that we have raised with the authorities the military and aerial bombardment to which he referred. We have protested about that; we have raised those points. I hope that I shall be able to report further on that.
    We are also engaged with the EU ######### of mission in Khartoum. We had discussions earlier this month. We and others in the EU have already pressed the Government of Sudan about Darfur and where it stands in the dialogue. Of course, we are pressing through the United Nations and the Secretary General's special envoy; and we are engaged with the United States.
    15 Jan 2004 : Column 725
    The Sudanese people know as well as any people anywhere how fragile and complicated peace building can be. It is all too easy for the perhaps disillusioned few to threaten the process. No one underestimates the difficulties that we face, in particular the difficulties in Darfur. But as noble Lords have acknowledged Sudan now has a real opportunity to bring to an end the suffering of its people. It is an opportunity which has to be seized.
    It is crucial that everyone, in all parts of Sudan, get to appreciate what is at stake—the real prizes of peace, security, stability and poverty reduction—and that everyone in Sudan feels that they have a say and a stake in their country's future. It is the best way to ensure that any peace agreement holds good for the future.
    The price is great, not just for Sudan, but for the entire region. A peace agreement in Sudan brought about under African mediation and implemented in Africa by Africans would be further evidence that while the continent may have its problems, it also has its solutions.
                  

02-06-2004, 02:34 PM

فتحي البحيري
<aفتحي البحيري
تاريخ التسجيل: 02-14-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 19109

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    بالحيل آجني
    ولكن يجب أن لا ننتظر المجتمع الدولي
    صاح؟؟؟
                  

02-06-2004, 03:17 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: فتحي البحيري)

    معاك ألف حق يا ود البحيري..
    ولكن علمتنا التجربة أن هؤلاء القوم
    يحسنون الإستناط والإستماع للشيطان الأكبر ومن ثم السمع والطاعة.
    ولله في خلقه شئون.


    Emergency Humanitarian Intervention for Darfur Must Be Planned Now:
    The Terrifying Dimensions of the Catastrophe Permit No Further Delay

    Eric Reeves
    February 5, 2004

    Statements over the last two days from the US Agency for International
    Development, Norway's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Canada's Foreign
    Affairs Minister (all appended below) have signaled a dramatically
    heightened sense of urgency about the humanitarian crisis in Darfur,
    urgency that has appropriately led to initial articulation of the need
    for an emergency humanitarian intervention.

    But planning for such an intervention must begin immediately, given the
    stark evidence that the Khartoum regime is willing to countenance
    unlimited human destruction and displacement in its genocidal conduct of
    the war in Darfur. A highly informed and authoritative Sudan monthly
    analysis has in the last week reported evidence indicating that more
    than 30,000 people may already have died in Darfur. Figures used
    internally by UN staff working on the Darfur crisis have been increased
    to 1 million displaced persons and more than 3 million "war-affected"
    civilians. Agricultural production is coming to a halt, a disastrous
    development that suggests the catastrophe will deepen for the
    foreseeable future.

    Emergency planning and deployment of the required assets---food,
    medical, logistical and, if necessary, military---must begin
    immediately. The alternative is countenancing the inevitable
    destruction of many more tens of thousands of innocent human beings from
    starvation, exposure, disease, and the ongoing predations of Khartoum's
    regular army and Arab militia forces (the Janjaweed).

    To be sure, there is reason to believe that because of the connections
    between Idris Deby, President of Chad, and the National Islamic Front
    regime in Khartoum, Deby may object to even the most urgently dictated
    humanitarian intervention being mounted from Chad, even as this is
    likely the only logistically viable location. Here the good offices of
    France, which has enormous diplomatic leverage with Deby, as well as
    other elements of a weak and divided Chadian government, would be of
    critical importance. The presence and blunt reports of the medical
    relief organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) on the Chad-Sudan
    border should provide the French government with an appropriate sense of
    urgency.

    For the moment, it is important to note that the US, Canadian, and
    Norwegian governments have finally found an appropriate register in
    speaking of the humanitarian crisis in Darfur. Andrew Natsios,
    Administrator for the US Agency for International Development and
    Special Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan, declared in a statement of
    February 3, 2004:

    "The United States reaffirms its commitment to addressing the immediate
    protection and assistance needs of those in Darfur, as well as
    throughout Sudan, including humanitarian cross border operations if
    assistance cannot be provided through Sudan." (Press Release, US Agency
    for International Development, February 3, 2004)

    Norway's Minister of Foreign Affairs Jan Petersen declared yesterday
    that, ""Norway will together with other donors ***do what is necessary
    to provide humanitarian relief and protection*** for the population of
    Darfur [emphasis added]."
    (Norwegian Foreign Ministry of Foreign Affairs Press Release, February
    4, 2004 [No.: 9/04])

    Bill Graham, Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister, declared this afternoon
    that, "It is imperative that agencies providing humanitarian assistance
    have immediate, safe and unhindered access to Darfur."
    (Statement by Bill Graham, Foreign Affairs Minister, Ottawa [Canada],
    February 5, 2004)

    Despite the forcefulness of these statements, their belatedness and
    lack of additional support from other Western governments (as well as
    the silence of the US State Department) make it almost certain that
    Khartoum will remain intransigent, simply refusing either to provide
    unfettered humanitarian access or to halt the savage war tactics
    recently chronicled so authoritatively by Amnesty International (see
    http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR540082004.

    Khartoum's willingness to remain intransigent, even in the face of
    overwhelming and desperate human need, should be ascertained by means of
    an immediate set of concrete tests. The regime's failure to respond
    satisfactorily to these tests should in turn immediately put in motion
    full-scale, urgent planning for a robust and fully secured humanitarian
    intervention, with initial deployment of logistical and material
    resources as soon as is practicable. Again, the alternative is to
    countenance the gruesome deaths of tens of thousands of innocent
    civilians in Darfur.

    At the same time, we must ask why Khartoum has continued to accelerate
    its campaign of civilian destruction and displacement in Darfur. And
    what relation does this genocidal ambition have to the peace talks
    between Khartoum and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) in
    Naivasha, Kenya (set to resume on February 17, 2004)?

    There are at least two (related) explanations: [1] fearing that any
    immunity for war crimes negotiated at Naivasha will not include actions
    that occur after a peace signing, Khartoum is attempting to make the
    most of, and indeed expand, the present window of criminal "opportunity"
    in dealing with its "western problem" (Darfur); and [2] the regime
    senses that as long as a peace agreement in Naivasha seems imminent, it
    will receive no real pressure or threats of meaningful action from
    Western diplomats, whatever it may do in Darfur. This latter point is
    emphasized today by John Prendergast of the International Crisis Group:

    "'There is a big problem right now. The [Khartoum] government wants to
    delay the talks for as long as it can in order to continue its offensive
    in the western part of the country,' Prendergast told IRIN. 'The
    government is trying to buy time.' He criticised the international
    community's 'quiet diplomacy' in the context of the crisis in Darfur,
    and urged both the British and United States governments to 'make it
    clear to both parties that many of the incentives on the table would be
    taken away.'"

    Prendergast rightly concludes:

    "At a time when additional pressure was needed to ensure that the
    parties made the final push towards a peace agreement, the international
    community had decided to engage in quiet diplomacy' without criticising
    the government's deliberate attempt to delay the talks, or its abuses on
    the Darfur battlefront. 'The government is happy so long as they are not
    under pressure,' [Prendergast] said. 'The current policy of quiet
    diplomacy is not working. We have empirical evidence that the regime
    responds to pressure.'"
    (UN Integrated Regional Information Networks, February 5, 2004)

    But instead of applying effective pressure on Khartoum to halt the
    massive carnage in Darfur, Western "quiet diplomacy" is only working to
    give a free hand to the regime, indeed is actually creating an incentive
    for accelerating human destruction. For there is considerable evidence
    that senior members of the National Islamic Front regime in Khartoum
    expect to be able to negotiate immunity from liability for war crimes,
    not only for their prosecution of the war in southern Sudan for the past
    fifteen years, but for present activities in Darfur. Certainly given
    the regime's ghastly record of war crimes, such a desire for immunity is
    not hard to understand.

    But there must be a clear international declaration in response to this
    vicious expediency on Khartoum's part, the regime's effort to finish its
    genocidal business in Darfur before an "immunity" deal is included in a
    final peace agreement at Naivasha: "There will be no immunity for any
    party, for any actions, anywhere in Sudan from this day forward. All
    present and future war crimes, in Darfur or any other region, will be
    referred to the International Criminal Court, without exception." (Such
    an argument should not be construed as support by this writer for the
    negotiation of an immunity agreement concerning past criminal actions.)

    Most fundamentally, if the Khartoum regimes refuses to halt the
    slaughter and displacement in Darfur, if it continues to arrogate to
    itself the right to pursue a policy of genocidal destruction, then it
    should be clear to all, even the most diplomatically expedient in London
    and Washington, that no signature at Naivasha will ever have any real
    meaning. The terrible irony of Western diplomatic silence on the
    realities of Darfur, especially the silence of the UK and the US State
    Department, is that it makes a meaningful peace agreement less, not
    more, likely. Trapped in the logic of diplomatic expediency, the two
    most powerful members of the Western "troika" in Naivasha have become
    ever more willful in their disregard for the horrific realities of
    Darfur. In turn, this is more and more encouraging of Khartoum's
    present conduct of the war, as well as its corresponding diplomatic bad
    faith in Naivasha.

    Certainly not a day now goes by without a fuller sense of what the
    realities of Darfur are. To be sure, the Amnesty International report
    (February 3, 2004) has made impossible any reasonable skepticism about
    the scale of the conflict or its decisive racial and ethnic animus. But
    just yesterday we received an extensive and telling account from the
    UN's Integrated Regional Information Networks (February 4, 2004;
    dateline Korbileke [Eastern Chad, 2km from the Darfur border]). The
    stories recorded are almost indistinguishable from the scores that
    Amnesty included in its report, and have the same terrifying consistency
    found by Amnesty:

    "All of the refugees---as well as the over 600,000 displaced within
    Darfur--tell similar stories. Rumours and inaccuracies about dates or
    numbers are frequent, but the substance remains the same: The 'Arab'
    militias and the army attack villages together or successively, burning
    them to the ground and randomly killing their inhabitants."

    Like the Amnesty International report, the IRIN reportage/analysis also
    deals with the complex issues of race and ethnicity in Darfur, reaching
    a remarkably similar conclusion:

    "In Darfur, where the vast majority of people are Muslims,
    Arabic-speaking and share a mixed gene pool, the distinction between
    'Arab' and 'African' is more cultural than racial. But for the
    victims of the conflict, the 'racial' aspect to the attacks is a
    constant theme."

    This is the insistent refrain from all who are now reporting on Darfur:
    "for the victims of the conflict, the 'racial' aspect to the attacks is
    a constant theme." This must be said; it cannot be finessed or simply
    ignored, as
    it was in the US State Department statement on Darfur (December 16,
    2004)---a statement at once thoroughly dated by more recent events and
    revelations, and also marked by an expedient refusal to talk about
    issues of race or ethnicity. Instead we were given only a euphemistic
    distinction between "indigenous opposition groups and the Sudanese Armed
    Forces and its allied militias" (Statement on Darfur, Office of the US
    State Department Spokesman, December 16, 2004).

    But even the more encouraging statements of the last few days from
    Norway, Canada, and the US Agency for International Development do not
    speak directly to this central feature of the conflict. Why this
    silence? Why this moral indecision? Why is the world refusing to hear
    and credit the voices of those fleeing the savage violence of Khartoum's
    regular forces and it Arab militias?

    "'It's a tribal problem. Black with black, Arab with Arab,' says
    Muhammad Husayn. 'There are no rebels in Habilah. It's a black
    population, that's why they came and bombed,' he said. 'All the blacks
    they find they kill.' Government bombs and attacks are indiscriminately
    killing both armed rebels and innocent civilians, who are all tarnished
    with the same 'black' brush, say the refugees."
    (UN's Integrated Regional Information Networks (February 4, 2004;
    dateline Korbileke [Eastern Chad, 2km from the Darfur border]).

    The voices of Norway, Canada, and the US Agency for International
    Development are of course still important, and still speak---at least in
    the cases of Norway and USAID---decisively to the humanitarian
    imperative of the moment. But the planning for a humanitarian
    intervention must begin, not merely be signaled. The UN Security
    Council should be urgently pressed to take up the matter. French
    diplomatic support, and pressure on President Deby of Chad, should be
    sought. And critically, the US State Department must find its voice, as
    must the UK government. Continued silence will only be construed by
    Khartoum as acquiescence.

    The National Islamic Front will not respond to anything but the most
    concrete and credible threat of such robust humanitarian intervention in
    Darfur. The regime's willingness to enter into serious peace
    negotiations with the insurgency groups and halt its genocidal conduct
    of the war in Darfur must be tested rigorously and immediately. Any
    continuation of the present massive campaign of human rights violations,
    violations of international law, and crimes against humanity must result
    unconditionally in war crimes trials.

    An international commitment to anything less is an invitation for the
    genocide to continue.

    Eric Reeves
    Smith College
    Northampton, MA 01063

    413-585-3326
    [email protected]
    ********************************************************
    Press release: Norway's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    February 4, 2004 No.: 9/04

    Norway seriously concerned about the situation in Darfur

    "Norway is extremely concerned about the further deterioration of the
    already dramatic humanitarian situation in Darfur province in western
    Sudan in the last few days. Norway deplores the recent bombing of the
    town of Tine, which continues the pattern of indiscriminate attacks on
    civilians, and the serious breaches of human rights that are constantly
    being reported," said Minister of Foreign Affairs Jan Petersen.

    Norway has discussed the situation in Darfur with the Sudanese
    authorities on several occasions, and has also raised the issue with UN
    Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Norway also took part in talks on possible
    measures to alleviate the situation in Geneva last week. In addition to
    Norway, the talks were attended by other like-minded countries and UN
    agencies.

    "Norway urges the parties to the conflict to enter into an immediate
    ceasefire, provide unimpeded humanitarian access to the population and
    comply with international humanitarian law. We also call on the parties
    to agree on independent monitoring of an agreement on cessation of
    hostilities," said Mr Petersen.

    "Norway will together with other donors do what is necessary to provide
    humanitarian relief and protection for the population of Darfur, and has
    urgently requested the UN to take a leading role in these efforts. We
    also urge the parties to find a solution to the conflict at the
    negotiating table. Since September 2003, Norway has contributed NOK 23
    million to humanitarian efforts in Darfur," concluded Mr Petersen.
    *******************************************************
    Statement by Andrew S. Natsios
    USAID Administrator and Special Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan

    WASHINGTON, DC 20523
    PRESS OFFICE
    http://www.usaid.gov/
    Press: (202) 712-4320

    2004-004

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 3, 2004

    WASHINGTON, DC---The United States government expresses grave concern
    over the recent escalation of the already dramatic humanitarian crisis
    in Darfur, Western Sudan. The United Nations estimates that 20,000 new
    refugees have arrived in neighboring Chad in the past two weeks, and
    another 30,000 crossed the border during December. There are now more
    than 100,000 refugees from Darfur in Chad. The conflict has displaced an
    estimated 600,000 people within Darfur and affected another three
    million. There is no humanitarian access to most of the affected
    population in Darfur. Significant hunger is reported, raising the
    prospect of a looming human catastrophe.

    The United States deplores the recent bombing in Tine that continues
    the pattern of indiscriminate attacks on civilians, and the gross abuses
    of human rights that are widely reported, such as torture and rape. The
    United States calls upon all parties to the conflict in Darfur to
    facilitate immediate, safe and unimpeded access for humanitarian
    organizations to all in need and to abide by international humanitarian
    law. The United States strongly urges the parties to agree immediately
    to an independently-monitored humanitarian ceasefire that covers all
    armed groups. The United States reaffirms its commitment to addressing
    the immediate protection and assistance needs of those in Darfur, as
    well as throughout Sudan, including humanitarian cross border operations
    if assistance cannot be provided through Sudan. The United States looks
    to the United Nations to
    lead this humanitarian effort in Darfur, and urges the parties to the
    Darfur conflict to resolve their issues peacefully.
    ******************************************************
    Department of Foreign Affairs (Canada)
    February 5, 2004 No. 18

    GRAHAM EXPRESSES CONCERN OVER DETERIORATING SITUATION IN DARFUR, SUDAN

    Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham today expressed deep concern over
    the deteriorating situation in Sudan's western Darfur region, as
    fighting and the displacement of civilians have intensified. The United
    Nations estimates that there are now more than 700,000 persons displaced
    from their homes, either within Sudan or in neighbouring Chad.

    "I join Acting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Bertrand Ramcharan
    in urging all parties to the conflict to put an immediate stop to the
    violence, to respect human rights and international humanitarian law
    and, in particular, to ensure the protection of civilians," said
    Minister Graham. "It is imperative that agencies providing humanitarian
    assistance have immediate, safe and unhindered access to Darfur."

    Graham further urged all involved parties to agree immediately to the
    UN's call for an independently monitored humanitarian cease-fire that
    would cover all armed groups. The Minister emphasized that, with peace
    so close in the civil war in the south, the international community and
    the parties to the Darfur conflict must redouble their efforts to find a
    rapid and peaceful solution to save lives and prevent broader
    destabilization.

    ----- End forwarded message -----


    .
                  

02-06-2004, 03:27 PM

ديامي

تاريخ التسجيل: 02-05-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 1637

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    ضد الحرب في أي شبر من أرض السودان كانت
                  

02-06-2004, 03:40 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    تشكر ديامي للدعم..

    التقرير أعلاه يحوي أرقام خطيرة لعدد الضحايا والمشردين نتيجة للحرب في دارفور الحبيبة

    تقرير داخلي يقدر عدد حالات الوفاة بي 300.000 حالة.
    تقديرات مكتب الأمم المتحدة مليون حالة وفاة.
    وثلاثة ملايين مشرد.

    وعلي كل من يعتقد أن المسألة فجوة أمنية ومجموعة من قطاع الطرق أن يفكر جيدا
    المسألة تطهير عرقي خطير..
                  

02-06-2004, 03:47 PM

Elmosley
<aElmosley
تاريخ التسجيل: 03-14-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 34683

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    العزيز خالد

    قولك فيه حكمة الذين يعرفون قيمة الوطن ونساندك فيه بقوة
                  

02-06-2004, 03:49 PM

lana mahdi
<alana mahdi
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-07-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 16049

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

    اخى خالد ليس هنالك حد لويلات هذا النظام الفاشستى ولم لم يبق فى السودان سوى الخرطوم لما اهتموا دارفورقطعة غالية من ارض الوطن
    ولاجلها
    اضم صوتى الى الجميع فى هذه الصرخة المدوية
    لنا
                  

02-06-2004, 04:05 PM

خالد الحاج

تاريخ التسجيل: 12-21-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 0

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: lana mahdi)

    أستاذنا الموصلي..
    تشكر للدعم ولكلماتك الطيبة..

    الأخت لنا مهدي..
    نعم ما قلتي إلا الحق..وألفت نظرك لمقالة للأستاذ محمد عبد القادر سبيل
    بعنوان مكّنوا اليسار من أداء دور تاريخي يحمل كل مضامين ما حذرتي منه هنا
    وتشكري للدعم.
                  

02-28-2004, 03:23 AM

Raja
<aRaja
تاريخ التسجيل: 05-19-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 16054

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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)


    من اجل اهلنا فى دارفور
                  

02-28-2004, 06:08 PM

Alia awadelkareem

تاريخ التسجيل: 01-25-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 2099

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Raja)

    وطني ...
    بكارة انتظار
    أوكاس تدار
    عند اقدام الكبار
    وطني ...
    لعبة إقتدار
    او تكنولوجيا الاحتضار..
    فباي جهة يدار
    يصير مائدة للقمار...!
                  

02-28-2004, 06:54 PM

hanouf56
<ahanouf56
تاريخ التسجيل: 06-02-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 1776

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مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Alia awadelkareem)

    اضعف الايمان

    رفع البوستات الخاصة بالاسبوع

    محمد
                  

02-29-2004, 02:43 AM

abdelrahim abayazid
<aabdelrahim abayazid
تاريخ التسجيل: 06-19-2003
مجموع المشاركات: 4521

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: Alia awadelkareem)

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03-01-2004, 08:08 AM

Kostawi
<aKostawi
تاريخ التسجيل: 02-04-2002
مجموع المشاركات: 39979

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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: abdelrahim abayazid)

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03-01-2004, 05:32 PM

maryoud ali

تاريخ التسجيل: 02-15-2004
مجموع المشاركات: 330

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Re: نداء عاجل للمجتمع الدولي ومنظمات حقوق الإنسان. (Re: خالد الحاج)

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